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The announcement that a $1 million
bounty has been placed on the head of exiled freedom fighter Assata
Shakur sends a clear, unmistakable message that the U.S. government
will stop at nothing to perpetuate the systemic denial of the
most basic human rights of African people born and/or residing
in the Americas. The National Conference of Black Lawyers (NCBL)
demands that the U.S. government immediately withdraw the bounty
offer, and permanently cease its pursuit of Assata Shakur as such
is both illegal and unjustifiable under international human rights
laws.
NCBL takes the ongoing attacks on Assata
Shakur personally. NCBL lawyers served on Shakur’s legal team
during her trial on charges that she killed a New Jersey State
Trooper. When NCBL pioneer Lennox Hinds dared to tell the truth
about the racist nature of the trial proceedings, bar officials
brought disciplinary charges against him. The travesty of the
prosecution and ongoing persecution of Shakur is demonstrated
best by Shakur’s own
account of the events in question. In 1998, she stated:
“...On May 2, 1973
I, along with Zayd Malik Shakur and Sundiata Acoli were stopped
on the New Jersey Turnpike, supposedly for a ‘faulty tail light.’
Sundiata Acoli got out of the car to determine why we were stopped.
Zayd and I remained in the car. State trooper Harper then came
to the car, opened the door and began to question us. Because
we were black, and riding in a car with Vermont license plates,
he claimed he became ‘suspicious.’ He then drew his gun, pointed
it at us, and told us to put our hands up in the air, in front
of us, where he could see them. I complied and in a split second,
there was a sound that came from outside the car, there was a
sudden movement, and I was shot once with my arms held up in the
air, and then once again from the back. Zayd Malik Shakur
was later killed, trooper Werner Foerster was killed, and even
though trooper Harper admitted that he shot and killed Zayd Malik
Shakur, under the New Jersey felony murder law, I was charged
with killing both Zayd Malik Shakur, who was my closest friend
and comrade, and charged in the death of trooper Forester. Never
in my life have I felt such grief...”
Notwithstanding the fact that defense lawyers presented objective
medical and other evidence that substantiated Shakur’s account
of the events in question, she was nevertheless convicted by an
all-white jury. Her sentence was life imprisonment plus 33 years.
She escaped from prison, and has lived in exile in Cuba since
1979. The attempts by New Jersey and Federal officials to capture
her have been relentless since that time.
Assata Shakur’s failure to find justice
within the U.S. system compels NCBL to analyze her circumstances
according to international law standards. The Universal Declaration
of Human Rights provides in various of its Articles that everyone
is entitled to: freedom from arbitrary arrest, detention and exile;
freedom from torture, and cruel and inhuman or degrading treatment;
the right to a presumption of innocence at trial; and the right
to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.
Assata Shakur has been flagrantly and continuously denied each
of these rights and others by a U.S. government that, as Shakur
herself has observed, is hellbent on making an example of
her in much the same way slave owners of an earlier era hunted
down runaway Africans, and returned them to the plantation for
purposes of public torture.
NCBL will direct inquiries to officials involved in this matter,
and otherwise begin an investigation into the facts and circumstances
that led to these events. NCBL will, according to its obligation
to the African World, make public all of its findings.
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