Join StopWatch’s Stop & Search Discussion at Parliament

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Diane Abbott MP

 

Event: Stop and Search – Impact on the Community and Prospects for Reform
Date: Tuesday 17th March
Time: 5:30pm for 6pm start
Free Ticket Registration Link
Facebook Event Link

The London Campaign against Police & State Violence are teaming up with the Stop & Search charity, StopWatch, to host a panel discussion on Stop & Search with MPs and ordinary Londoners affected by Stop & Search.

This meeting will be hosted by Diane Abbott MP and is open to anyone and everyone interested or affected by the use of Stop & Search in London, to attend you must register by Monday 16th March here.

Below is a video of a previous event organised by StopWatch which debated if Stop & Search does more harm than good:

Grant Nigerian Lesbian Aderonke Asylum Now | Court solidarity 3 March 2015

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This is a call out for court solidarity at a judicial review hearing for asylum for Aderonke Apata, a human rights and LGBT rights activist from Nigeria who would be seriously at risk if deported to Nigeria. We are joining a long list of other organisations in demanding #AsylumforAderonke.

Details

When: Tuesday 3 March

Where: Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, WC2A 2LL. Meet at the main massive court arches on the Strand, by the zebra crossing (https://goo.gl/maps/Lhljl).

What time: Meet at 8:30am at the court, although you’re still welcome if you can only come later in the day!

Also:

  • Share the Facebook event, and invite your friends! https://www.facebook.com/events/774059142690902/
  • Bring PLACARDS AND SIGNS about Aderonke’s case. You can use the ones Aderonke made (at https://drive.google.com/folderview…), or make your own! Aderonke’s suggested a few phrases you may want to use: Asylum for Aderonke Now; Grant Nigerian Lesbian Aderonke Asylum Now; Aderonke, LGBT Positive Role Model Must Stay; Aderonke, Human Rights Activist Must Stay.
  • Bring RAINBOW FLAGS if you have them. This is a specific request from Aderonke! If not, we have rainbow badges!

Important: Aderonke has also asked that we do not chant outside the court or cause any hassle inside the court because she doesn’t want to annoy the court and affect her case.

About Aderonke

Aderonke, as part of her determined campaigning on LGBT issues and more. Feminist and human right activist, Aderonke is a Nigerian-born out and proud lesbian seeking asylum in the UK. She fled torture and the threat of death for being a lesbian in Nigeria, and has proved to be an unstoppable force in fighting for justice. In spite of terrible violence and human rights violations, Aderonke has chosen to stand up not only for herself, but for others who have experienced injustice.

Aderonke grew up in Nigeria where being gay or transgender is illegal. Aderonke was arrested, tortured and extorted by the Nigerian Police and forced to endure the murder of three members of her family and girlfriend. When sentenced to death by a Nigerian Sharia court, Aderonke had no other choice than to flee to the UK and seek asylum.

Aderonke has garnered almost 320,000 signatures online for her personal campaign to remain in the UK because she is a lesbian from Nigeria who is open, out and proud. Setting an example through this struggle fighting for her own freedom to stay here in the UK, she fights tirelessly for other people’s freedom too and continue to challenge the government and legal system that penalises the many LGBT refugees seeking asylum in the UK.

Please sign Aderonke’s petition.

Other groups supporting this call out:

* Africanrainbowfamily
* Manchester MiSol (Migrant Solidarity)
* London Black Revs
* Sex Worker Open University
* NovaraMedia
* Out And Proud
* LGBT Unity + Unity Centre Glasgow
* The Glass Is Half Full
* Never Again Ever
* South London Solidarity Federation and North London Solfed
* London Campaign Against Police and State Violence
* UK Black Pride
* Proud2Be
* Unite The Union NW/389
* Broken Rainbow UK
* Lesbian Immigration Support Group (LISG)
* Right to Remain
* Unison LGBT
* Safety4Sisters
* Women Asylum Seekers Together
* SOAS Detainee Support (SDS)

Justice for Habib “Paps” Ullah | Inquest summing up starts today

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The summing up at the inquest into the death of Habib “Paps” Ullah starts today.

Please follow the hashtags #Papsinquest and #7YearsNoJustice to get updates and breaking news over the next few days, and retweet the tweets. The campaign’s Twitter is @Justice4Paps.

All news and daily reports from the inquest can be read on Justice4Paps website.

About the case

Habib ‘Paps’ Ullah died on Thursday 3rd July 2008 after being thrown to the ground during a stop and search by police officers in a car park in High Wycombe. He was 39 years old and leaves behind a young family.

Justice4Paps have fought for nearly seven years to ensure answers and justice through an inquest. An initial inquest in 2010 was stopped part way through at the request of the Independent Police Complaints Commission, after officers said that they had changed their accounts of the night based on legal advice.

For more information, watch this video:

http://www.presstv.ir/Video/2015/02/04/395997/Inquest-into-man-who-died-in-police-custody-starts-in-UK

Since Habib’s death in 2008 there have been two other deaths in custody in High Wycombe and Slough of African-Caribbean men. In the last 18 months there have been five Muslim deaths in custody in the UK and as campaigners Justice4Paps have been active in supporting those families and other victims of police harassment and brutality. If you are able, please consider making a donation to Justice4Paps to enable them to continue their essential work.

LCAPSV Statement on Tasers in the Evening Standard

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On Friday 13th February, The London Evening Standard published an edited version of a letter we wrote in relation to their story on One hundred more police officers armed with Tasers to patrol in London, you can read their version here: Letters to the editor: We must resist the spread of Tasers

We publish our full statement with references to underline our commitment to fighting institutional racism in the Metropolitan Police. Thanks to our volunteers who collectively put a lot of work in putting this statement together in a short space of time:

The decision to increase the number of police officers armed with what the Metropolitan Police call ‘less-lethal weapons’ is a dangerous, knee-jerk reaction to a possible threat. Tasers are not ‘non-lethal weapons’. In 2012, a report produced by the American Heart Association stated unequivocally that Tasers can cause cardiac arrest and death. Between 2001 and 2013 there were 540 deaths resulting from the use of stun gun’s by US police officers. Before this announcement figures from 2013 showed that police usage of Tasers in England & Wales had more than doubled from 2009 levels. Alarmingly those figures also showed that Metropolitan Police used Tasers 53 times on London’s children which was a sharp increase.

Theresa May cited London Assembly evidence which revealed that 50% of people Tasered in the UK are from black or other minority ethnic backgrounds and 30% are emotionally or mentally distressed and ordered a review, this action seems to fly in the face of that. Given that BME people make up only 14% of the population, these figures are incredibly disproportionate and clearly indicate that the Metropolitan Police Service remains institutionally racist.

We believe unarmed vulnerable and/or BME people will be put at greater risk. The Commissioner’s assertion that an increase in Taser deployment is necessary to deal with the threat of terrorism is without evidential basis and indicative of the authoritative creep in counter-terrorism policing. This move will bring more, not less, violence to the capital’s streets

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Statement On Operation Shield

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On Thursday 22nd January, it was announced by the London Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC) that a £200,000 budget was set aside for a new tough anti-gang initiative called “Operation Shield” which is being trialled in the London boroughs of Lambeth, Westminster and Haringey for the next 12 months.

Operation Shield, according to the London Evening Standard, will enable the Metropolitan Police Trident team and local authorities to bring civil or criminal sanction to “known gang members” if any supposed gang member carries out an assault, stabbing or other serious crime.

“The penalties will range from recall to prison, gang injunctions banning them from parts of the capital or mixing with their associates, mandatory employment training courses or ejection from social housing.

The offender who triggers action will be fast-tracked through the criminal justice system for swift sentencing.”

In other words if a crime or misdemeanour has been committed then the police will be able to assign guilt to anyone they identify as a “gang member”. This then could lead to an entire family being evicted from their home and/or innocent people serving long prison sentences. This is akin to collective punishment, people being punished for acts for which they neither participated nor in many cases had any awareness of.

The precedent for this can be described by many working class families who have had family members wrongly convicted through Joint Enterprise. A law which has enabled the Police and the Crown Prosecution Service to imprison people from as young as 13 years old on the pretext of association. The campaign group JENGbA, who spoke at our 2014 conference, describe cases of predominately black youth who had been imprisoned for joint enterprise murder despite being unconscious, physically not present and in one case partially blind, that is the case of a Warrington youth Jordan Cunliffe, who is serving 12 years even though it was recognised in court that he was not at all involved in the fatal attack.

Also Operation Shield is using the precedent of the “fast-track justice” that was seen during the uprisings of August 2011. Anyone being pushed through this scheme may face prejudice and stigma in the courts as a “serious gang member” and thus face exemplary long prison sentences.

The use of the word “gang” in policing and crime contexts, we believe is a racialised term to stigmatise groups of working class black youth and stereotype them as criminals by default. This trial project will form the basis of more mass stop and search, mass arrests and arbitrary evictions in places like Brixton, Tottenham and council housing in Pimilco and Victoria.

London Black Revolutionaries are organising leaflet drops around Lambeth this weekend and the other target area in the coming weeks. We will be supporting these efforts and organising our own leaflet drops, community meetings and actions in the coming months.

If you want to get involved with LBR’s efforts see below and with our activities please contact us directly.

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Saturday: #Brixton2Ferguson Meeting

Saturday 24 January, 5pm to 8pm
Karibu Education Centre, 7 Gresham Road, London SW9 7PH

Brixton event on Facebook

Black lives matter. Black lives should have mattered before they were gunned down or choked to death, both to the officers charged with protecting and serving them and to a judicial system that has exposed itself as involved in a deadly chokehold of its own.

– Reverend Osagyefo Uhuru Sekou

Speakers: Reverend Sekou, Marcia Rigg (Sean Rigg Justice & Change Campaign), Lee Lawrence (son of Cherry Groce), Carole Duggan (Justice for Mark Duggan), Wail Qasim (Defend the Right to Protest), London Campaign Against Police & State Violence.

The London Campaign Against Police and State Violence is supporting the United Families and Friends Campaign efforts along with others to conduct a national Ferguson Solidarity Tour to help build links with other campaigns against racialised state violence and murder.

The speaker from Ferguson, Missouri the place where the #BlackLivesMatter movement started is Reverend Sekou. We believe that his contribution to the discussion of resisting and organising against state racialised violence will be important for many to hear.

Our speaker will be share the platform in this rare and necessary event organised by Defend the Right to Protest and many others.

We are aware of that the London Black Revolutionaries have pulled out of the tour which is regrettable and we wish it could have been avoided. However their concerns about the issue of black democratic leadership in this movement is something that we share and will monitor this issue closely.

Our solidarity for those who continue survive or have lost loved ones to racialised state violence endures beyond these meetings, and our police station or court support, it will endure and continue to live when we come together on the street.

Whether in Westfield or Brixton, New York or Ferguson, Burkina Faso or Nigeria, Black Lives Matter.

Brixton victim of Police Brutality Found “NOT GUILTY” of Police Obstruction

In June last year, “D”, a black man while driving through Brixton was stopped and assaulted by police officers from the Territorial Support Group. The ferocity of attack left him with a cracked rib. After he pulled over, the officers jumped out of a van and claimed that they saw him make a drug deal. He was originally charged with “assaulting a police officer” but this was changed to “police obstruction” and the trial took place at the Inner Crown Court, earlier this week. D was put on a warning list and so was given only 18 hours notice before his trial date started making it difficult for LCAPSV to organise court solidarity.

After a 3 day trial, D was found “Not Guilty” by a Crown Court Jury, he is grateful for all the support he has received and is now taking considering his options about subsequent actions. Thank you for all the support whether in attending or even just sharing this incident. 

Case background

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Friday: Support D, a victim of police violence at Inner Crown Court

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Date and Time: Friday 16th January at 9:30am
Location: Inner Crown Court, Sessions House, Newington Causeway, London, SE1 6AZ
Nearest Tube: Elephant & Castle

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1495109154060614/

D, a Brixton resident and a person of African descent was brutally victimised by violent police officers in June, last year. Details about his case can be found here.

He is asking for as many people as possible to support him at court tomorrow where he will be facing charges of Police Obstruction.

He was given only 18 hours notice yesterday about his court case so any turnout would be very appreciated.

BRIXTON NYE Prison Solidarity – MAKE SOME NOISE!

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JOIN US AGAINST THE RACIST PRISON SYSTEM

Date: 31st December 2014

Time: 6pm to 8pm

Place: Brixton Prison, Jebb Avenue, London SW2 5XF

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/621568717969283/

Tube station: Brixton

Bus routes are: 45, 109, 118, 133, 159, and 250

// Bring banners and something you can make some noise with. Drums, pots, pans, sirens, speakers, megaphones, horns. //

Join LCAPSV and others as we protest the racist prison system in the UK, demand change, and let people on the inside know we haven’t forgotten them. We will assemble on the corner of Jebb Avenue and Brixton Hill at 6pm. Then make our way to Brixton Prison, making as much noise as we can. There will be a speak out against detention and prison, and music and poetry.

Black people are killed by the state on the streets, but they are also killed under incarceration. In the UK, one person a week dies in police custody, or following police contact. Jimmy Mubenga was suffocated by racist G4S security guards on an aeroplane. Sean Rigg was asphyxiated in Brixton police station. Ricky Bishop was also killed in police custody at Brixton police station. Sarah Campbell died within hours of arriving at Styal Prison. 15 year old Garthe Myatt was killed by security guards at Rainsbrook Secure Training Centre. Between 1969-2011 3,180 individuals have died in custody, whilst in the care of police or prison officials, those running secure psychiatric units, immigration detention centres or whilst they were being deported.

Where they don’t kill you outright, prison and detention takes time from you, isolates you from your community and your family and does the same to your loved ones on the outside. This is not done at random, but is systematically racist in its intent and practice. It is another side of state racism that is elsewhere seen in the racist application of stop and search, immigration law, and extra-judicial killings.

The proportion of people of African-Caribbean and African descent incarcerated here is almost seven times greater to their share of the population. In the United States, the proportion of black prisoners to population is about four times greater.

Incarceration is not only destructive of the lives of black men and women, but also the men, women and children who make up their families, their friends, their lovers and their lives. Every life destroyed inside prison includes many other lives destroyed outside of it.

Noise demos outside of prisons are a continuing tradition across the world. A way of expressing solidarity for people imprisoned during the New Year, remembering those held captive by the state. A noise demo breaks the isolation and alienation of the cells our enemies create, but it does not have to stop at that.

Remembering Jimmy Mubenga & the International Day of Migrants

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Jimmy Mubenga who died in G4S deportation custody aged 46

 

Today is the international day of migrants, while some rightly celebrate the contributions that migrants bring to these shores. For many of us, today is a day of mourning and remembrance.

There is a demonstration today at 6:30pm outside the Home Office Building (2 Marsham Street, SW1P 4DF) in solidarity with Jimmy Mubenga’s family. It has been organised by Movement for Justice which we and Black Revs support. The details are here

We mourn the individuals, the parents, the children and the babies who have drowned or were killed by traffickers in attempting migrate across the Mediterranean sea to safety in Europe.

Our tears carry a promise to end this suffering.

We mourn the deaths of Joy Gardner, Jimmy Mubenga, Prince OfosuChristine Case, Rubel Ahmed and the many others who died in state custody due to migrating to Britain without regular documents, we will organise with their loved ones towards justice.

Our tears carry a promise to end this suffering.

We mourn those whose names are not known, those who died in humble circumstances not deemed horrific enough to capture media interest.

Our tears carry a promise to end this suffering.

We remember those like Isa Muazu who have been demonised, disgraced and deported by successive governments.

We remember the hundreds of thousands who migrate to Europe, the tens of thousands stranded at tent strewn refugee camps and the many thousands locked up in immigration detention centres.

We remember the Harmondsworth hunger strikers, the uprisings at four detention centres and the resistance and solidarity that is being built in defence of migrants.

Their actions sustain a growing movement. It transforms our promise from a hope to a reality. May it continue until the victory.

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London Campaign against Police & State Violence as a group currently focusses our efforts on police brutality but we work with other organisations where state sponsored violence overlap with this and other issues.

We recommend the following organisations that work on specifically on defending the rights of migrants:

Anti-Raids Network
Migrants Rights Network
Movement for Justice
RAMFEL Charity
Right to Remain