Sign up now to be added to our up to date E-list and recieve vital information concerning Mumia and his case..
  

MUMIA GEAR FOR SALE MUMIA'S COMMENTARIES FREE MUMIA FACEBOOK JOURNALISTS FOR MUMIA MYSPACE MUMIA VIDEOS


coalition banner

Click here for statement from member of Venezuelan Partiament


U.S. activists in solidarity with political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal



Published Dec 11, 2008

Dec. 6 was declared an International Day of Solidarity with death row political prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal. Events were held in France, Switzerland, Germany, England and Mexico, while in the U.S. events were organized in Detroit, San Francisco, Baltimore, Portland, San Diego and other cities. Mumia’s lawyers are currently appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court for a new guilt-phase trial, while the Philadelphia district attorney is appealing to the same court in an effort to execute Mumia without a new sentencing-phase jury trial. The following are summaries of some of the U.S. events.


Philadelphia, Dec. 6, one of many protests<br>in cities around the world.
Philadelphia, Dec. 6, one of many protests
in cities around the world.
Photo: Audrey Hoak

PHILADELPHIA

Hundreds of spirited and determined demonstrators straddled both sides of a circular drive around Philadelphia’s City Hall across from District Attorney Lynn Abraham’s office on Dec. 6 to confront her attempt to fast track the execution of Mumia Abu-Jamal. Abraham, known as “the deadliest DA in the U.S.,” has called on the U.S. Supreme Court to reinstate Abu-Jamal’s death sentence, despite mounds of evidence of his innocence. The largely youthful crowd filled the frigid December air with chants of “No Justice, No Peace! Until Mumia Abu-Jamal’s Released!”


Pam Africa presents pieces<br>of the widely acknowledged<br>evidence of<br />  Abu-Jamal’s<br>innocence.
Pam Africa presents pieces
of the widely acknowledged
evidence of Abu-Jamal’s
innocence.
WW photo: Lal Roohk

The rally opened with a phoned-in solidarity greeting live from Venezuelan campesino leader Braulio Álvarez, a member of the National Assembly representing the Yaracuy states.

Álvarez called from a protest outside the U.S. Embassy in Caracas where Venezuelans gathered to present a letter to the U.S. ambassador calling for the state in Pennsylvania to immediately liberate Abu-Jamal.

Pam Africa of the MOVE organization and International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal challenged the assertion by District Attorney Abraham that there was no evidence that Abu-Jamal was innocent or denied a fair trial. Africa called on Captain William Fisher, head of Philadelphia’s Police Department of Civil Affairs, to come forward, and she proceeded to pile his arms with mounds of books, files, CD’s and photos containing evidence that has been gathered over the years to take to Abraham.


Suzanne Ross holds photo<br>of Braulío Álvarez,<br>Philadelphia, Dec. 6.
Suzanne Ross holds photo
of Braulío Álvarez,
Philadelphia, Dec. 6.
WW photo: Lal Roohk

Noting that in 1981 and again in 1985 both the police and district attorney were given copies of photos taken by independent photojournalist Pedro Polakoff that contradicted prosecution witnesses’ accounts, Africa challenged Abraham’s position that evidence proving Abu-Jamal’s innocence was not timely and therefore could not be admitted to court. Africa noted that the prosecution had these photos, yet kept them from defense attorneys.

The rally was followed by a march past the Union League on S. Broad Street, where earlier in the day President George W. Bush was present to see his portrait hung. Some protesters carried placards with a photo of Bush behind bars for war crimes with the slogan “Jail Bush! Free Mumia!”

At 13th and Locust streets the march stopped for a brief enactment of the 1981 crime scene, where Hans Bennett of Journalists for Mumia outlined the contradictory statements of state witnesses that have since been exposed as lies by Polokoff’s photos and other eyewitness accounts.

The march concluded with another spirited rally as protesters occupied Market Street outside the Federal Court building, where speakers included Manolo de los Santos of the Iglesia San Romero de Las Américas; Suzanne Ross of the New York Free Mumia Coalition; and Ashanti Alston of the Jericho Movement, who spent more than a decade in prison. Alston spoke of the need to free all political prisoners, including Leonard Peltier and the San Francisco 8.

Monica Moorehead of the International Action Center spoke on Abu-Jamal’s refusal to compromise his principles and his continued political contributions through radio commentaries and weekly columns on issues from imperialist wars abroad to the economic crisis at home. “With almost two million people foreclosed out of homes this year and millions unemployed, we have to link these wars at home when we raise the political struggle against prisons, police brutality and stop and frisk. Mumia would want us to.”

Fight Imperialism, Stand Together organizer Larry Hales remarked that it has been 39 years since the murders of Black Panther members Fred Hampton and Mark Clark by Chicago police. “We don’t want to wait 39 years to observe another anniversary about Mumia. Young people today aren’t being educated about the great social movements, but they are going to be radicalized as they fight back against the conditions they face today, and they’ll come to understand the importance of raising political prisoners’ demands.”

—Betsey Piette

MONTANA

Student and community activists in support of Mumia Abu-Jamal met on Dec. 2 in Missoula, Mont., on the campus of the University of Montana (UM) to hear Larry Hales, an International Action Center organizer, and see the film distributed by the Peoples Video Network, “The Framing of an Execution: Mumia Abu-Jamal and the Media.”

Rachael Carroll, an organizer with the Montana Human Rights Network and Montana Abolition Coalition, a statewide movement against the death penalty, also spoke. The coalition was also a sponsor of the event.

Carroll reported that the Montana component of the prison-industrial complex is part of the racist trend throughout the United States, where members of oppressed nations are imprisoned and receive death sentences far beyond their numbers in the population. She said, “American Indians in Montana are about 6 percent of the population, but Indian women comprise between 42 percent and 75 percent of all women in prison in the state. In addition, Indian men comprise more than 22 percent of both prisoners and those receiving the death penalty.”

Both Hales and Carroll spoke about the need for people to get involved in local and statewide actions against the racist death penalty as well as to support Mumia and demand that his legal lynching be stopped. Both organizers encouraged those present to follow the advice of Mumia to “Organize! Organize! Organize!”

Elisabeth Stoeckel, a UM graduate student, chaired the meeting and represented the Social Justice Action Network, an event sponsor and a UM organization that provides social work graduate students with the opportunity to get involved with social justice activities on campus and in the community. Other UM groups supporting the event included Students for Economic and Social Justice, Students for Peace and Justice and the International Action Center in Montana.

The day before the Missoula event, activists and members of Amnesty International and the IAC gathered In Dillon, Mont., on the campus of the University of Montana Western. They heard Larry Hales speak about Mumia’s case and then engaged in a lively discussion to plan further actions in support of Mumia and the statewide movement against the death penalty in Montana.

The meetings in Missoula and Dillon were the first held in the state by the International Action Center in Montana, and are seen by state organizers of the IAC and other involved groups as stepping stones to building a statewide network to not only oppose the racist death penalty and the unjust imprisonment of oppressed and poor people, but also to engage in other political action against economic and political injustice.

—John Lewis

BUFFALO, N.Y.

Activists in the fight to free U.S. political prisoners gathered in Buffalo to watch a new video, “Fighting for Mumia’s Freedom: A Report from Philadelphia.” They also watched a CBS-produced program, “West 57th,” that told so much truth about the case of Leonard Peltier that it outraged the government when it was aired in the 1980s. A lively discussion followed.

— Ellie Dorritie


Cleveland
Cleveland
WW photo: Susan Schnur

CLEVELAND

Nearly 100 people braved a snowstorm in Cleveland on Dec. 6 to protest the 27 years of wrongful imprisonment of Mumia Abu-Jamal and to recommit to the struggle for his freedom.

Abu-Jamal’s life was put in the context of J. Edgar Hoover’s war against the Black Panther Party by Abdul Qahhar, chair of the Cleveland chapter of the New Black Panther Party. Devin Branch of the Cleveland October 22 Organizing Committee described Abu-Jamal’s frame-up and the important aspects of his legal case.

Rev. Nozomi Ikuta and Yahya Abdussabur spoke about the situation of the Puerto Rican freedom fighters still in prison and the frame-up of Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin (the former H. Rap Brown).

Messages of solidarity from prisoners falsely convicted in connection with the 1993 Lucasville prison uprising were read. The audience cheered recent victories in the campaign for the Lucasville prisoners as counted out by Sharon Danann of the Lucasville Uprising Freedom Network. Jackie Thomas, spouse of Lucasville prisoner Rasheem Matthews, told how they tracked down the witnesses who testified falsely against Matthews and urged the audience to pack the courtroom during Matthews’ new trial.

Artists from the Hip Hop Workshop, a project aimed at keeping youth out of gangs while creating music without offensive language, provided poetry, dance, rap and hip-hop. The event was seen as a step toward a broader campaign on prison issues.

—Sharon Danaan

SAN DIEGO

On Dec. 7, the African American Artists and Writers hosted an Evening of Solidarity to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal at the Malcolm X Library in Southeast San Diego.

A number of attendees left the Cuba/Venezuela/Mexico/North American Labor Conference in Tijuana early and walked across the U.S./Mexico border to be a part of this gathering. This made the meeting truly international, linking the struggle to free Mumia with the struggles of the many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean that were represented at the conference.

Sylvia Telefaro of AAWA opened the discussion by saying, “We are all warriors on the ground—stepping up the struggle to free Mumia.” Speakers included John Parker, Los Angeles International Action Center; Sabrina Green, Free the Move 9 and International Concerned Family & Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal; and Paul LouLou Chery, general secretary of the Federation of Haitian Workers. Dave Welsh of the Haiti Action Committee was scheduled to speak and interpret for Chery, but was delayed at the border to support a Haitian brother, Benissiot Docios, who was detained. (Docios was allowed through Customs only after he paid a “fine” of hundreds of dollars.)

Parker spoke about how important it is to link up the issues of people all over the world, stressing that Mumia’s essays are about this type of solidarity. Parker noted that Mumia rarely writes about himself. Green gave an update on the Move 9 and initiated a phone call to Pam Africa, who applauded the solidarity action. Africa gave an update on Mumia’s case and a Dec. 6 march in Philadelphia. On The Move showed a video by Hans Bennett (see www.abu-jamal-news.com).

Elder Eusi Kwayana, a local activist, member of the Langston Hughes Poetry Circle and a native of Guyana, spoke about a letter that he wrote in May to the Brazilian government concerning the disappearance of Haitian civil rights activist Lovinski Pierre-Antoine. Kwayana was central in bringing together Afro-Guyanese and Indo-Guyanese people during Guyana’s independence struggle. Kwayana said that what the state is trying to do to Mumia is “a lynching.”

Zola Mohammad spoke of the struggle to free freedom fighters Imam Jamil and Leonard Peltier. Dianne Mathiowetz of Atlanta said, “Let us not forget Troy Davis. We send revolutionary greetings to the Cuban 5 and all political prisoners.”

Jim Moreno, a poet with the Langston Hughes Poetry Circle who attended the Tijuana conference, recited a poem that was inspired when he talked to LouLou Chery. One question in the poem concerned the hunger of the people of Haiti, to which Chery responded that the people hunger for the return of democratically elected president Bertrand Aristide.

Chery spoke of solidarity and unity and the work that is taking place to build the Federation of Haitian Workers (CTH). He said that Haiti is a poor country with a strong and rich history.

A group photo from the meeting will be sent to Mumia.

— Gloria Verdieu


Articles copyright 1995-2008 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email: ww@workers.org
Subscribe wwnews-subscribe@workersworld.net
Support independent news http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php

This was also just released by WW:

 

Prisoners support Mumia Abu-Jamal


Published Dec 11, 2008 

On Dec. 6, at Cleveland’s event protesting the injustice of 27 years of wrongful imprisonment of Mumia Abu-Jamal, two of the prisoners framed on false charges in connection with the 1993 Lucasville, Ohio, prison uprising sent these excerpted messages of solidarity, which were read by their relatives.

 
 
Due to widespread campaigns for their freedom, both prisoners are finally out of solitary confinement after more than 15 years. Mosi O. Paki, an uprising participant, never received a trial but was charged with an internal prison rules infraction. Greg Curry’s charges materialized out of thin air when he refused to testify falsely against other prisoners following the uprising.
Revolutionary greetings, comrades and brothers and sisters. Revolution means change, which is overdue for the innocent but railroaded Move 9 and the “voice of the voiceless,” Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Since learning about Mumia in early 1989, I find it hard to separate him and the Move Organization, nor the staged railroading and ongoing confinement of the innocent voice of Mumia’s that spoke truth to corruption and falsehood. This brother never failed to step to the plate for the people’s benefit. Let us all step to the plate for this brave, innocent brother until he is released from this nearly three decades of wrongful confinement. From one political prisoner for another—Free Mumia Now!
 
 
Ona Move in the Struggle,
Mosi O. Paki
Greetings. I’d like to first thank all of you who participate in struggle. Your efforts and energy keep the sunlight bright. I’ve read much about Mumia Abu-Jamal [and] his unselfish love for oppressed people, so it’s really great to see international support for justice in his case.
I can recall reading W. E. B. DuBois once saying, “It’s easy to gather support for the famous and well off. But who will defend the less known?” There are many of us with solid evidence who, all things equal, would be set free. Please, comrades, become familiar with our cases and get to know us personally. Many of us are prepared to join you in struggle and growth.
Freedom First,
Greg Curry


Articles copyright 1995-2008 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved. Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email: ww@workers.org
Subscribe wwnews-subscribe@workersworld.net
Support independent news http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php
 

Never forget Fred Hampton & Mark Clark



WW commentary



By Stephen Millies


Published Dec 11, 2008


Fred Hampton
Fred Hampton
 

Thirty-nine years ago Black Panther Party leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were assassinated in Chicago on Dec. 4, 1969, in a pre-dawn police raid on West Monroe Street. President Richard Nixon, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and Cook County State’s Attorney Edward Hanrahan were responsible.

At least 28 members of the Black Panther Party were killed as a result of the FBI’s COINTELPRO extermination program, which was approved by the Nixon administration.


Mark Clark
Mark Clark
 


The Chicago Tribune ran photos of a door supposedly filled with bullet holes to prove that the police were fired upon. Upon examination these holes turned out to be nails. There is an ongoing struggle to rename Monroe Street after Hampton, a move bitterly fought by the local cops.

Hampton grew up in Maywood, a Black suburb just west of Chicago. A natural leader, Hampton became a revolutionary and infused everyone around him with his optimism.

Hampton was a tremendous organizer who helped make the Illinois Black Panther Party chapter the largest in the country. I remember a 1969 Chicago rally to free Panther Chairman Bobby Seale where six buses came from the small Black community of Rockford, Ill.

Cops busted Hampton for handing out hundreds of ice cream bars to kids. While in jail, Hampton won over the leader of the Young Lords to revolutionary politics.

Hampton was only 21 years old when he died, yet the FBI had already over 4,000 pages of information on him. That’s how dangerous he was to the capitalists. Cops fired additional bullets into Hampton’s head to make sure he was dead.

In a 2006 interview with WW reporter Eric Struch, Fred Hampton Jr. talked about his father and Chicago: “In this city, in particular, the names do not even change, and the actual criminals, how they have been rewarded, they have been elevated. There is no better example that we can lay out than the present mayor of Chicago and the former state’s attorney, Richard Daley, who is the son of gangster Daley Sr., who during his tenure was responsible for how the assassinations of Chairman Fred and Mark Clark had went down.”

Hampton Sr. used to say, “You can kill the revolutionary, but you can’t kill the revolution.” We must not let the wealthy execute Mumia Abu-Jamal, who was 15 years old when he helped form the Philadelphia chapter of the Black Panther Party.

If Hampton and Clark were alive today, they would be with the courageous workers occupying the Republic Windows factory in Chicago.

The writer attended the funeral of Hampton and Clark.

--------------------------------------

http://i117.photobucket.com/albums/o59/jaysyro/dec6.jpg

 

The following is a list of events planned for Dec 6th...

BERLIN, GERMANY

Dec. 9:  Panel discussion on Mumia Abu-Jamal on the 27th aniversary of his unjust incarceration @ CLASH, Gneisenaustr.2a, 10961 Berlin
Dec.10:  Benefit Gig for the FREE-MUMIA-campaign in Berlin with BERLIN BOOM ORCHESTRA, DETREND CITY ROCKERS and others @ SO 36, Oranienstr.190, 10999 Berlin
 Dec.13:  DEMONSTRATION: FREE MUMIA ABU-JAMAL!  from Berlin-Kreuzberg to the new US-Embassy

www.mumia-hoerbuch.de/bundnis.htm
http://www.workers.org/2008/us/interview_0828/

Berlin Benefit Concert Info:
http://www.so36.de/

Berlin Boom Orchestra (Ska/Reggae) http://www.berlinboomorchestra.de
Immigranstki Raggamuffin Kollektiv Soundsystem (ROTFRONT)  http://www.myspace.com/rotfrontberlin
De.Trend.CityRockers (Breakbeats) http://www.myspace.com/detrendcityrockers
Host MC "REBELL DER WELT" (Rap) http://www.myspace.com/rebellderwelt< /div>

Doors will be open at 8 pm CET. At the US-East Coast that will be 2 pm.

Our "technical department" came up with the idea of an internet livestream via
one of the free radios in town.

Most likely we will be using the internet stream of Radio-Metropolis (
http://www.basisradio.org/radio-metropolis/ ). In cooperation with them we have
been presenting the FREE MUMIA News every Monday at 6 pm CET for more than a
year now anyway. They still need to check if their server is strong enough.

If you are interested in listening and promoting a world wide FREE MUMIA event
on Dec. 10 please let us know. The exact live stream address will be sorted out
soon.

The full programme of the Berlin FREE MUMIA week of action is here 
http://mumia-hoerbuch.de/termine.htm


MEXICO CITY

This year, when the internationally recognized political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal has lost three appeals for a new trial to prove his innocence, the deadliest D.A. in the United States, Lynne Abraham, is demanding that the federal Supreme Court order his execution without even holding a hearing. The only alternative, according to the courts, is to bury him in prison, in the same way that the Mexican courts intend to bury Ignacio del Valle, Felipe Álvarez, and Hector Galindo, with 112 ½ and 67 ½ ye ar sentences and furthermore, ruin the lives of hundreds of other Mexican political prisoners held in Almoloya, Molino de Flores, Ixcotel, Pochutla, el Amate, los Llanos, Topo Chico, Neza Bordo or the Reclusorio Norte with increasingly long sentences, gringo style.
Many of you are familiar with the case of the African-American writer Mumia Abu-Jamal. He was condemned to death for having been active in the Black Panther party in the sixties and for defending the MOVE organization against the Philadelphia police with his combative journalism in the seventies. The pretext for his false incrimination was the killing of the policeman Daniel Faulkner on December 9, 1981. Maybe you joined in the international mobilizations that stopped his execution twice in the nineties or maybe you’ve participated in more recent actions. Maybe you’ve read his essays in the independent media (although you surely haven’t been able to count on the mainstream media for adequate coverage of his case).
In all these years, the State has never been able to silence “the voice of the voiceless”. Like many other political prisoners, he’s never lost his force even in the most vulnerable conditions. His voice is now heard in the far corners of the world, instilling rage in the powerful. Even though the lies of the District Attorney’s office have been totally discredited and their racist maneuvers uncovered, the politicians of the city of Philadelphia and the state of Pennsylvania have more at stake than ever in silencing this writer, simply to protect their own power base, built in large part on his case.
Mumia’s case is a strong argument against the [in]security measures planned for Mexico and dictated by Washington: the death penalty, (formal) life sentences, and the construction of more maximum security prisons, for starters. For 27 years, half his life, this activist for social justice has unjustly withstood physical and psychological torture in these hellholes under the threat of death.
Now when the Zapatista communities, the teachers of Morelos, students in teacher training schools in Guerrero, and the citizens of Morelia have been targets of the terrorism of the Zetas and other elite military / police forces trained by the government and their Israeli and gringo advisors, the architects of repression take advantage of the widespread fear in the society to demand even more military and police equipment and training, death sentences, and the construction of more prisons to dominate the society and criminalize social protest. How many of the true criminals in this country will end up in these prisons? Does anybody want to bet?
--If you don’t want to live in a society where imprisonment, legal or illegal executions, mass rape and other forms of torture, disappearances and the persecution of social activists is used to squash the legitimate opposition of the people to the looting and destruction of the country by the rich,
--If you know that most of the violence comes from the police and think it’s both illogical and criminal to train more agents of repression and torturers,
--If you want to stop the construction of more torture centers,
--If you realize that you, as a conscious person or activist, could be a political prisoner simply for defending your land, or protesting, or being in the street with more than three people, or painting graffiti, or being in the wrong place at the wrong time,
--If you share the struggle of Mumia Abu-Jamal and the political prisoners of Mexico and the world for freedom, justice and dignity, and if you want to bring them home–– speak out for their freedom.

Saturday, December 6- 3 pm. Bring drums, acoustical instruments, song, rap, or spoken word to the cultural- political rally in the main plaza; the same day there’ll be a big march in Philadelphia and actions in other cities in the world.
Mondeay, December 8- 7 pm. Come to an evening of film and discussion on Mumia, the Black Panthers, and the MOVE organization at the Ricardo Flores Magón Center .
Tuesday, December 9- 3 pm. Participate with banners, music and messages in the rally in front of the United States Embassy on the 27th anniversary of Mumia’s arrest.  
Saturday, December 13- 6 pm . Dance for freedom to the rhythm of ska, hip hop and reggae at the Chanti Ollin  with the groups  Santocho Antifa, Zona Norte Colektivo, al Intifadah, Natty Dread Fyah Attack and Radiokupa.

-Organize another action or event during the week.
FREE ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS!
Amig@s de Mumia, Mx     
        



SAN FRANSISCO

The Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal has called for a mass protest on:
Tuesday, December 9 at 4:30 pm at the SF Federal Court House on 7th Street and Mission.

PORTLAND, OREGON

A night of celebration, struggle and knowledge

Dec. 9, 2008

Performances by:
Drew Slum
Blacque Butterfly
DJ Ian Head
Gabriel Teodros
And b-boy crews

Screening of a short film about Mumia

Dec. 9, 2008 6 – 8 p.m.
PSU's Multicultural Center
2nd floor, Smith Memorial Union
1825 SW Broadway
Donation

Co-sponsored by KBOO, Students for Unity, Portland's Friends of MOVE and Mumia

Donations go to International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal.

PHILADELPHIA
Day of International Solidarity to free MUMIA ABU-JAMAL
Saturday, DEC. 6
at 12 Noon District Att orney Ofice
2 South Penn Square (East Side of City Hall)
March to Federal Courts 5th St. & Market
Before it’s too late, Stop the murder of MUMIA!

BALTIMORE
End the Death Penalty in Maryland and
Build the International Day of Solidarity 
to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
Dec 5
7pm
Cork Gallery Building
Cork Gallery
4th Floor Doorbell #9
302 E. Federal St.
Baltimore, MD 21201

DETRIOT

Detroit Meeting on the Struggle to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal

Date: Wednesday, December 3, 2008, 7:00 p.m.
Location: 5922 Second Avenue at Antoinette, Near WSU Campus
Film & Discussion: MOVE Documentary and US Political
                  Prisoners Today
Sponsor: Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice
        (MECAWI) 
Contact: Tel. 313.671.3715
E-mail:  info@mecawi.org
URL:     http://www.mecawi.org
 
contact:
Ameejill
Baltimore Friends of MOVE
(443) 850-2840

PARIS

December 10th, Human Rights Day, demonstration in front of the US Embassy to protest the death penalty, to assert Mumia's innocence, and to demand a meeting with Embassy representative to discuss Mumia's case and to present important information.  

MARSEILLE, FRANCE

Déc 6 in Marseille - France
Demo in front of the USA Consulate from 3PM to 6 PM
and for the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Panel
with  Amnesty International Marseille, Human Rights League Marseille (LDH), Christian against Torture and death Panalty, Marseille (ACAT)

Stand, speach

In solidarity
Véronique & Jocelyn
Marseille Comitee to  free à Mumia Abu-Jamal

Comité de Soutien à Mumia Abu-Jamal de Marseille
Tél/fax : 04 91 42 98 47
mumia.marseille@free.fr
www.mumialibre.over-blog.com

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
In Charlotte, N.C., on Dec. 6, the newly released documentary “In Prison
My Whole Life” will be shown. It tells Abu-Jamal’s story from the
perspective of William Francome, who was born in London on Dec. 9, 1981,
the day Abu-Jamal was arrested in Philadelphia and charged with the
murder of a police officer. Never-seen-before footage and brand-new
evidence create a case for reasonable doubt while exploring the
socio-political climate in the U.S., past and present.
Sponsored by the Charlotte Free Mumia Coalition and Students for a
Democratic Society-UNCC, the screening will take place at 7 p.m. at
Charlotte Energy Solutions, 337 Baldwin Ave.

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA

On Dec. 3 in Raleigh, N.C., youth from Fight Imperialism, Stand Together
(FIST) will host a film “Power to the People” about Abu-Jamal’s case.
The program starts at 6 p.m. in the Ballroom at Shaw University’s Garrey
Hall.

CLEVELAND

In Cleveland people from many organizations will come together at the
Unitarian Universalist Society on Dec. 6 to protest injustice and
present revolutionary art. Speakers will address Abu-Jamal’s case along
with messages of solidarity, read by family members, from prisoners
unjustly convicted in connection with the 1993 Lucasville prison uprising.
Talks will also address other prisoners who currently face execution or
harsh sentences, including Puerto Rican activists in U.S. jails. Artists
from the Hip Hop Workshop will present music, poetry and dance. The
event starts at 7 p.m. at 2728 Lancashire Rd., Cleveland Heights.

MONTANA

IAC Activist Larry Holmes will be speaking in Montana. for more information pelase contact the IAC center (www.iacenter.org)

 

We also received word that St. Denis, France, Bonn, Switzerland, and other cities are holding solidarity events!

 

PLEASE DONATE TO THE STRUGGLE FOR MUMIA'S FREEDOM.
Your donation will go directly to the Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coalition
and International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal

Sign up now to be added to our up to date E-list and recieve vital information concerning Mumia and his case..
  

MUMIA GEAR FOR SALE MUMIA'S COMMENTARIES FREE MUMIA FACEBOOK JOURNALISTS FOR MUMIA MYSPACE MUMIA VIDEOS