Wednesday, October 17, 2007

State Repression: Past and Present

From the Green Scare to the Continued War on the Black Liberation Movement

Featuring:

Ramona Africa of MOVE
Will Potter, Journalist and Creator of GreenIsTheNewRed.com

Other Speakers: TO BE ANNOUNCED

Saturday, November 17 at 7 p.m. (Starts Promptly)
at St. Stephen's Church
1525 Newton Street NW
Washington, D.C.

$5-10 sliding scale, suggested donation will cover expenses and benefit
political prisoners. NO ONE TURNED AWAY FOR LACK OF FUNDS.

Join journalists, attorneys, and former political prisoners at a forum
discussing the links between past and present instances of
state repression of social justice movements. From the targeting of animal
and environmental activists being dubbed by many as the "Green Scare" to the
37-year-old charges being brought against former Black Panthers in San
Fransisco, hear how history is repeating itself as state repression
intensifies in the era of the "War on Terrorism" -- and what we can do to
fight it.

FEATURING:

Ramona Africa is the sole adult survivor of the massacre of 11 members of
the MOVE organization. On May 13, 1985, the FBI and the City of Philadelphia
dropped a C4 bomb on MOVE's 6221 Osage Avenue home in West Philadelphia.
Carrying the young Birdie Africa (the only other survivor) with her, Ramona
dodged gunfire and escaped from the fire with permanent scarring from the
burns. After surviving the bombing, she was charged with conspiracy, riot,
and multiple counts of simple and aggravated assault. Subsequently Ramona
served 7 years in prison. If she had chosen to sever her ties with MOVE, she
could have been released far earlier. In the face of this she held true to
her revolutionary beliefs and was uncompromising in the face of state
terror. Since her release from prison, Ramona has tirelessly worked as the
MOVE Minister of Communication on behalf of the MOVE 9, Mumia Abu-Jamal,
and all political prisoners and prisoners of war.

Will Potter is an award-winning independent journalist based in Washington,
D.C., who focuses on how the War on Terrorism affects civil liberties. He
has tracked how lawmakers and corporations have labeled animal
rights and environmental activists as "eco-terrorists." He has also
closely followed the trial of the SHAC 7, a landmark First Amendment case
involving a group of activists charged with "animal enterprise terrorism"
for running a controversial website.


For further information and updates, go to: www.dcinfoshop.org

No comments: