International People's Tribunal The Case of Mumia Abu-JamalDecember 21 1997 RWOR

On December 6, The People's International Tribunal for Justice
     for Mumia Abu-Jamal was held at the Blue Horizon--a huge old
     theater in North Philadelphia, not far from where the main
     headquarters of the Philly chapter of the Black Panther Party
     used to be on Columbia Road. At least 1,200 people came to
     the Tribunal, from Philadelphia and from all over the world,
     including New Jersey, New York, Virginia, Detroit, Vermont,
     Boston, the Virgin Islands, Chicago, Washington, D.C.,
     Baltimore, Mississippi, Canada, Martinique, French Guyana,
     France, Spain, Egypt, Haiti, Germany, South Africa. Increased
     participation by activists and masses from Philadelphia was
     particularly significant. And a lot of different forces worked
     together to make this important Tribunal happen. Mumia himself
     had called for such an event to happen and sent a statement of
     support, which ended with "Let our work here stimulate the
     natural vibration for liberation that radiates afar!" 

     One of the goals of the event was to change the terms of debate
     around this case from, "Is Mumia guilty?" to "Is the system
     guilty?" And the proceedings offered systematic evidence of the
     gross human rights violations against Mumia Abu-Jamal and
     other victims by a whole list of enemies of the people: Thomas
     Ridge, Governor of Pennsylvania; Ronald Castille, Justice of the
     Supreme Court of Pennsylvania; the Supreme Court of
     Pennsylvania; the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections;
     Edward Rendell, Mayor of Philadelphia; the Fraternal Order of
     Police; the Police Department of Philadelphia; Albert Sabo,
     Judge of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas; Lynne
     Abraham, Philadelphia District Attorney; Federal Bureau of
     Investigation, Janet Reno, United States Attorney General. After
     an all-day presentation of the evidence, the international panel of
     judges voted to find these authorities guilty of numerous crimes
     and proposed that, among other things, Mumia be immediately
     released from prison. 

     As the tribunal began, the theater was abuzz with activity.
     Banners hung from the balcony and many political groups had set
     up tables. The stage was draped with African cloths and three
     drummers beat out a defiant rhythm as people took their seats.
     The Mumia Abu-Jamal singers from Swathmore College
     performed two songs, one of them in Spanish. They were
     followed by the Seeds of Wisdom, a rap group formed by some
     of the MOVE kids, who rhymed to Mike Africa's rap, "Just
     Because It's Legal Don't Make It Right." 

     Mumia's sister Lydia greeted the crowd, saying, "It's truly
     wonderful to see all of you here. I welcome you to Philadelphia.
     My family says thank you, thank you, thank you so much for
     being here. It is you that has kept Mumia alive this far. Today we
     are about to embark on something very historical for Philadelphia
     and we expect it to be grand. We expect good results from this
     and we expect you to put everything you have into this. Thank
     you for your love and support. Mumia is strong. I talked to him
     on the phone and he knows that you'll do the right thing. Peace." 

     The event was conducted as a formal tribunal. The judges, who
     came from all over the world were introduced (see document,
     "Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law"). An indictment was
     read that detailed the crimes of each of the officials. And the
     prosecution then began its case. Evidence was presented in the
     form of narratives, oral testimony and videotaped evidence.
     Done mostly in chronological order, it covered Mumia's teenage
     years, the Black Panther Party and Mumia's role,
     COINTELPRO (the government's counter-intelligence
     program), the authorities' war on MOVE and Mumia's work as a
     journalist now known as "the voice of the voiceless", current
     police scandals and abuse, prison conditions and the death
     penalty. There was a thorough presentation of the legal evidence
     in Mumia's case followed by a summation and deliberations of
     the judges. 

     The opening statement by the people's prosecution described
     Mumia's life. It talked about how as a youth, Mumia was beaten
     by police for protesting an appearance made by racist Governor
     George Wallace. It described how 14-year-old Mumia joined
     the Black Panther Party, began to write for its newspaper and
     quickly became a target of FBI and police surveillance. Then it
     moved through the '70s to Mumia's coverage of the attack on the
     MOVE house in Powelton Village. And finally, it described the
     fateful December night in 1981 when Mumia and a cop named
     Daniel Faulkner were shot on the Center City street and "five
     people said they saw someone run from the scene." 

     Philadelphia-based journalist and teacher Linn Washington said,
     "Mumia Abu-Jamal's case is an extraordinary one, indeed. But to
     see it solely as an extraordinary case is to miss its real import.
     The injustices that animate Mumia's case--misconduct by police,
     prosecutors and, yes, judges, occur every day in Philadelphia.
     The bottom line on this case is the gross misconduct, the
     injustices involving the aforesaid person's affect on Black, brown,
     red, yellow and, yes, poor white people, again, every day."
     Washington talked about the epidemic of police brutality and
     shootings under Frank Rizzo, who was police chief in the late
     '60s and '70s. He described how Rizzo ordered a vicious attack
     on a demonstration of school children who were demanding the
     right to Black studies. A video showed Rizzo saying, "The
     Philadelphia police are going to do their job," while behind him,
     police were beating kids in the street. 

     Ronald Hampton, executive director of the National Black Police
     Association, spoke of his own experience and knowledge of
     police brutality in Philadelphia. Walter Palmer discussed the
     "structural racism in our society" that gives rise to systematic
     police brutality. Linn Washington ended this section by pointing
     out that during the Rizzo years, the mainstream media largely
     ignored police brutality, that it was risky to expose police abuse
     and that Mumia was one of the few journalists who did. 

     The Black Panther Party,
     Mumia and COINTELPRO

     Rosemari Mealey, a former member of the Philadelphia and
     New Haven chapters of the Black Panther Party, talked about
     her years in the party with Mumia. She described how with each
     new challenge or attack on the party, Mumia grew stronger and
     his writing did, too. She said, "We all know of Mumia's history
     during the middle and later '70s, where his prominent, stellar
     journalistic skills as the people's communicator jetted him to
     national and international prominence. He was a radical journalist
     who never compromised the real import of his profession. He
     was the writer who mastered the pen as a sword, hurling it into
     the very core of the enemy's path with the truth. On that fatal
     December night in 1981 when he was shot, beaten, then arrested
     by the Philadelphia police because a cop was allegedly killed by
     Mumia, the world nearly lost a voice of truth and reason that
     exposed the facts and unmasked the deceptions... When he was
     captured, the police knew they had the best, and he had to be
     silenced at all costs. This was the collaborative thinking of the
     police and the FBI." 

     Ward Churchill, co-author of Agents of Repression: The FBI's
     Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the
     American Indian Movement and COINTELPRO Papers, gave
     an overview of the U.S. government's COINTELPRO program.
     He pointed out that the point of the program was to identify
     those individuals who had an "effectiveness to communicate
     ideas" and that if you were a "key agitator," you were a
     target--like Mumia. Churchill also talked about political prisoner
     Leonard Peltier, "who's serving double life sentences in a federal
     facility at the present time based not upon the fact that they
     believe he actually did that for which he was convicted but based
     upon the fact that he serves as a symbol, a symbol of the costs
     that will be imposed by this society upon those who dare to
     stand up for their basic human rights, to resist and to struggle for
     a better world." 

     Geronimo Ji Jaga added testimony about government
     frame-ups--which he has direct experience with. Former Black
     Panther and victim of COINTELPRO, he spent 27 years in
     prison for a murder he did not commit--finally becoming free last
     summer. Geronimo said, "You have to understand that with
     Mumia, you're talking about the entire movement and
     strengthening the death penalty and they're strengthening it right
     now and even without the history of contributions and sacrifices
     that our beautiful brother has made, just by the fact alone that we
     have a revolutionary that they are about to execute is enough
     reason for us to raise the alarm and to prepare ourselves to
     defend him and to save his life. It's left to the people out on the
     streets to do these things. Cause if y'all wouldn't a did it for me, I
     would still be in there...." 

     The War on MOVE and
     the Voice of the Voiceless

     One piece of evidence of the government's war on MOVE was a
     powerful video in which Ramona Africa described the bombing
     of the MOVE house on May 13, 1985. Ramona was the only
     adult survivor of the bombing. As she spoke, the video showed
     the police attacking the house with high pressure water hoses,
     tear gas and then dropping two bombs on the roof. Ramona
     described how, when the adults tried to get out of the house,
     they were shot at by the police. Eleven men, women and children
     died in the inferno. 

     Walter Palmer, a liaison between MOVE and the authorities
     during a 1977 police blockade of MOVE, described how city
     officials treated MOVE and how MOVE won concessions
     despite ongoing threats. I-Abdul Jon, who's been associated with
     MOVE since 1977, introduced Sue Africa, a member of MOVE
     whose son Tomasso was killed in the 1985 bombing and who
     herself served over 12 years in prison for her defense of the
     MOVE house in Poweltown Village. Sue talked about John
     Africa's stress on the importance of consistency and unity to win
     and how by following this, MOVE won the release from prison
     of five of their members in 1978. 

     Police Brutality

     There were four presentations about current police brutality.
     Daniel Sterling discussed the 39th District scandal, in which
     dozens of cases were thrown out after police were caught
     framing people for crimes they did not commit. In 1981, one of
     the cops involved in this scandal had asked his girlfriend, Pamela
     Jenkins, to say Mumia shot Faulkner, even though she wasn't
     even on the scene. 

     Ellen Sumikawa from Asian-Americans United spoke about
     police brutality and said, "There's a campaign to criminalize Asian
     youth on a massive scale in this city under the guise of controlling
     so-called Asian gangs." Charles Reeves, who lives in Greys
     Ferry, where two Black youth were recently beaten by a gang of
     racist whites, also gave testimony about racism and police
     brutality. 

     A powerful moment of the Tribunal was when Dona Rosa
     DeJesus and her cousin took the stage. Speaking in Spanish,
     DeJesus told how her son was murdered by the police. Her
     cousin translated: "The 25th District came and they beat her son
     and he had an epileptic attack. She had told the officers, but they
     wouldn't listen and they kept beating him. And there were like
     nine officers that beat him and he died two days later at Temple
     Hospital and she says she wants justice and she wouldn't want
     this to happen to anybody's children or anybody else in the street
     that the police like to abuse. And she wants help to stop this
     from happening. And there isn't a day that goes by that she
     doesn't remember. She witnessed the police officers beat him.
     He was a good person and he was 30-years-old when this
     happened to him.... And she's never going to forget this. She
     always has her son in her heart and she just hopes that we can
     stop this police brutality." 

     The Death Penalty

     Tonya McClary of the NAACP Legal Defense & Education
     Fund gave testimony about the death penalty, noting that while
     many countries around the world have abolished capital
     punishment, the United States has stepped up executions. She
     told the panel that 40 percent of those executed in the U.S. are
     Black, far exceeding the percentage of Black people in the
     population. She also said a person was five times as likely to
     receive the death penalty if they were Black and killed someone
     white than the reverse. Terry Rumsey said African-Americans
     are 61 percent of those on Pennsylvania's death row while they
     make up 11 percent of the population. Rumsey also told the
     judges 90 percent of those on Pennsylvania's death row are
     poor. And he said "99 death warrants were signed by Governor
     Ridge in three years" and called Philadelphia the "death penalty
     capital of the United States" because this one city "sent more
     people to death row than 37 states in the entire country." 

     The Frame-up of Mumia

     There was a detailed recounting of the evidence that shows
     Mumia is innocent, evidence which has already appeared in the
     pages of the RW*. This was presented by Mumia's lead attorney,
     Leonard Weinglass and Attorney Michael Tarif Warren. During
     his presentation, Warren held up a 1972 FBI photo of Mumia on
     which they had written the word, "dead." Steven Hawkins, a
     member of Mumia's legal team and the National Coalition to
     Abolish the Death Penalty, documented the bias of Judge Albert
     Sabo, who heard both Mumia's original so-called "trial" and his
     Post-Conviction Relief Appeal. Hawkins went into how during
     the sentencing phase of Mumia's trial, the prosecution used
     political statements made by Mumia, more than 10 years earlier,
     like quoting Mao saying "political power grows out of the barrel
     of a gun," as an argument for why Mumia should received the
     death penalty. 

     Videotaped statements from eyewitnesses at the murder scene
     were shown, including one where Veronica Jones described how
     she lied on the stand at Mumia's trial after two detectives
     threatened her with 15 years in prison. In 1996 Jones was found
     by Mumia's defense team and testified that she saw two men run
     from the murder scene--the same story she had originally told the
     police. After the videotapes were shown, Veronica Jones came
     up on the stage. The entire audience rose to their feet and
     applauded, and Jones thanked people for welcoming her. 

     Voices for Mumia

     As part of documenting the significance of the voice the
     government is trying to silence, there were readings from
     Mumia's books Live from Death Row, Death Blossoms, a
     commentary by Mumia, the RW interview with Mumia, and the
     video "Prison Industrial Complex." Readers included Francis
     Goldin, Mumia's literary agent; Mark Taylor, professor at
     Princeton University and coordinator of Academics for Mumia;
     Sabrina from the D.C. coalition; Tommy Montero, a North
     Philadelphia resident; author and Temple University Professor
     Sonya Sanchez; Professor and Attorney Soffiyah Jill Elijah, who
     also brought greetings from Kwame Toure (AKA Stokely
     Carmichael). There were videos which showed Mumia, as well
     as the brutal conditions in the prison where he is being held. 

     Henry Richards performed a spoken word poem about Mumia.
     A fundraising pitch was shared by Pam Africa, Geronimo Ji Jaga,
     Kathleen Cleaver and Ishakamusa Barashanga. Safiyah Bukhari
     of the N.Y. Mumia Coalition announced the call for Jericho '98,
     a demonstration to be held in Washington, D.C. on March 27
     aimed at winning recognition and freedom for political prisoners
     in the U.S. There were solidarity messages from political
     prisoners Leonard Peltier, Assata Shakur, Eddie Conway, Silvia
     Baroldini, Sekou Odinga, Matula Shakur and Marilyn Buck.
     Rosa Escobar from Pro Libertad brought greetings on behalf of
     15 Puerto Rican political prisoners and prisoners of war. A
     group of activists from Vermont were joined by MOVE children
     in a performance piece called, "The Truth." King Hector of the
     Latin Kings brought a message of support from his group.
     Monica Moorehead of the National Peoples Congress read
     statements of support from former U.S. Attorney General
     Ramsey Clark and a group of prisoners in Huntsville, Texas
     known as Panthers United for Revolutionary Education. And
     Leon Williams, who ran against Lynn Abraham for DA last fall,
     said he supported a new trial for Mumia. 

     After six hours of testimony and close to an hour of deliberation,
     the judges brought back their verdict: The authorities are guilty of
     the crimes as charged in the indictment. 

     A press release after the tribunal said, "Their conclusions were
     summarized in a three-page document that stated the named
     agencies and officials blatantly violated Mumia Abu-Jamal's
     constitutional and human rights, which led to `his unjust
     conviction, unlawful incarceration, and illegal death sentence.' "
     The document also recommended holding a thorough, impartial,
     international investigation into the conduct of the Philadelphia
     Police Department, the Counter-Intelligence Program
     (COINTELPRO) of the FBI, the 1985 bombing of the MOVE
     headquarters in Philadelphia, and that those public officials found
     responsible for violation of Mumia Abu-Jamal's human rights
     should be removed from office." 

     On Wednesday, International Human Rights Day at the UN, the
     findings of the Tribunal were presented to an assistant of the UN
     High Commissioner on Human Rights by Gamal Nkrumah, Julia
     Wright and Ramona Africa. 

     
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