Press Release
Contact: Don Rojas
Email: donjbrojas@gmail.com
Institute of the Black World Defends Black Lives Matter
Calls on Pres. Obama to Visit Baton Rouge and St. Paul, as Well as Dallas
New York, July 10, 2016...The Institute of the Black World 21st
Century (IBW) is defending the Black Lives Matter Movement against
false criticism from right-wing political pundits that the Movement was
responsible for the tragic deaths of five Dallas police officers.
While
condemning the murders, by callous policemen and by a disturbed former
Afghanistan veteran, IBW is also calling on President Obama to be "fair
and balanced" in his posture towards the horrific and terrorist-like
murders in recent days by visiting Baton Rouge and St. Paul after he has
visited Dallas on Tuesday and to demonstrate, in both words and deeds,
his equal concern for the families and communities of those who died in
all three cities.
In
citing the official statement put out by Black Lives Matter (BLM)
leaders on Friday, IBW said the unvarnished truth is that the Black
Lives Matter Movement has never called for the murder of police officers
and has said over and over again that it is time in this country for
policing to be accountable, transparent and responsible.
"We
agree with the BLM that this is what communities in the United States
want to see from the people who protect and serve them," said IBW's
President Dr. Ron Daniels. "There needs to be accountable, responsive,
transparent policing that has oversight from those communities and that
is accountable to the communities they are supposed to protect and
serve. We also call on civil rights and human rights organizations to
stand with the Black Lives Matter Movement to ensure that they are not
scapegoated, repressed and marginalized."
Daniels
called for an urgent national conversation on race and structural
racism saying such a conversation must involve all strata of society and
should be more than "just talk and pious rhetoric" and, instead, must
produce a public policy agenda of action items that include
thorough-going criminal justice reform, comprehensive community-based
economic development, and a reparations program that seeks social
justice and a starts a process of repairing and healing the ongoing
devastating social and psychological consequences from the historical
crimes of chattel slavery and legal Jim Crow segregation.
"America
needs to find the honesty and moral courage to confront the sins of its
past and the living consequences of those sins today," said Daniels.
"Now is the time for all people of good will to commit themselves to
this imperative."
The
IBW President also noted that the time is long overdue to end the War
on Drugs which over the past 25 years has contributed to a spike in
police brutality, accompanied by an explosion in the mass incarceration
of young black and brown men in vastly disproportionate numbers across
the country. "The War on Drugs has been a war on black and brown
communities which has broken thousands of families and beat a path of
social and economic devastation across the United States," said Daniels.
The
events in the USA in recent days have sparked outrage and concern in
black communities across the world, manifested in a huge demonstration
in support of the Black Lives Matter Movement this weekend in London,
another in Canada, and expressions of horror in radio and television
call-in programs across the Caribbean and in the government of the
Bahamas issuing a travel advisory urging its citizens visiting the USA
to exercise "extreme caution around police."
**************
|
▼
No comments:
Post a Comment