[Bloquez l'empire!] ! 12 Reasons to take to the streets of Montreal-Nord this Saturday

JBS jbswire at gmail.com
Fri Oct 10 03:07:41 PDT 2008


[Please post and forward widely; encourage EVERYONE you know to be at Parc
Pilon (Henri Bourassa & Pie-IX) in Montreal-Nord this Saturday at 2pm! More
info at http://montrealnordrepublik.blogspot.com]

[La version française:
http://nooneisillegal-montreal.blogspot.com/2008/10/12-raisons.html]

[English version with hyperlinks:
http://nooneisillegal-montreal.blogspot.com/2008/10/12-reasons.html]
-----

This coming Saturday at 2pm at Parc Pilon in Montreal-Nord, a diverse
cross-section of Montreal groups and individuals are coming together to
denounce police brutality as part of a child-friendly demonstration.

This is a crucial protest for all those who oppose poverty, racism and
police brutality, as well as support autonomous, grassroots organizing for
real justice and dignity. It comes just two months after the killing of
Fredy Villaneuva in Montreal-Nord, one year after the tasering death of
Quilem Registre in St-Michel, and more than two years after the unexplained
shooting death of Anas Bennis in Côte-des-neiges. It comes in a context
where 43 people have been killed by the bullets or electric shocks of the
Montreal police in just 21 years.

There are three main demands for this Saturday's demonstration: 1) a public
and independent inquiry into the death of Fredy Villaneuva; 2) an end to
racial profiling and to police abuses and impunity; 3) the recognition of
the principle that as long as there is economic inequality there will be
social insecurity.

Below are 12 more reasons to get out and demonstrate this Saturday. Please
post and forward widely, and do make a final effort TODAY (Friday) to
encourage your networks and contacts to attend this Saturday.

Police partout, justice nulle part! No justice, no peace! -----


12 Reasons to take to the streets of Montreal-Nord this Saturday
by jbswire at gmail.com

1) Breaking down fear and isolation; 2) Oppose "divide and rule" – Part 1;
3) Oppose police investigating other police; 4) Oppose police attempts to
shut down public transparency; 5) Oppose police and media smears of police
killing victims; 6) "The 43 Reasons"; 7) The Montreal-Nord riots were
justified; 8) Accommodate This!; 9) Oppose "divide and rule" – Part 2: 10)
Oppose sellout "community" gatekeepers: 11) Support grassroots community
organizing; 12) For People Power

[English version with hyperlinks:
http://nooneisillegal-montreal.blogspot.com/2008/10/12-reasons.html ]


1) Breaking down fear and isolation

It's not easy to confront police brutality and impunity. The police have
tremendous power, as the armed force of the state. Individuals experience
police abuses, brutality, and racial profiling on a daily basis, but are
often too afraid to speak out. When we do speak out, we lack the resources
to effectively take on the cops and government, and are marginalized by both
mainstream groups as well as government-paid community hacks. This
Saturday's demonstration is one clear way that we can all, collectively,
come together to break down the fear and isolation we so often feel, and
instead stand united behind clear demands for justice.


2) Oppose "divide and rule" – Part 1

This past Thursday's cover story in Le Journal -- "Les Agitateurs s'en
mêlent" -- is a transparent attempt by the police and their media allies to
create divisions between the diverse groups that have come together to
denounce police brutality. The police and government officials fear the
emerging unity between grassroots, on-the-ground social justice groups and
movements that have converged in support of the clear and powerful demands
of this Saturday's demonstration. Let's show the hacks at Le Journal, and
their cop friends, that we refuse to be divided.


3) Oppose police investigating other police

Mayor Tremblay and all kinds of other politicians and so-called community
leaders have constantly urged the public to refrain from judgment in the
killing of Fredy Villanueva until the "investigation" has been completed.
But, all the so-called investigations into police killings involve one squad
of police investigating another.  We are now supposed to trust the Surête de
Québec (SQ) to fairly investigate the Montreal police. This is the same SQ
that has it own corrupt and deceitful past and present – from the "Matticks
Affair" where police officers were involved in illegal activities, to the
recent Montebello protests where SQ officers acted as agent-provocateurs and
tried to lie about it afterwards. Most recently, this past Monday, the SQ
riot squad attacked members of the Lac Barrière Algonquin Community, using
tear gas and pepper spray even against children. There is a mafia-like
"brotherhood" between cops that prevents them from ever honestly bringing
any of their members to true justice, and gives them an incentive to
cover-up each other's abuses.


4) Oppose police attempts to shut down public transparency

When there are quasi-independent inquiries into police killings, the cops
try to shut them down. More than two years after the police killing of Anas
Bennis, and after a long public campaign led by the Bennis family, a
corner's inquest was called to investigate the reasons for Anas' death.
However, as they've done in other cases, the Fraternité des policiers et
policières de Montréal have gone to court and sued the coroner and the
Bennis family themselves, to try to shut the inquiry down. The police and
their expensive lawyers have consistently tried to shut down even the most
modest efforts at accountability.


5) Oppose police and media smears of police killing victims

Recently, the lawyer for Montreal police officer Giovanni Stante, who was
involved in the killing of homeless man Jean-Pierre Lizotte in 1999, wrote
in both the Montreal Gazette and La Presse, claiming that Lizotte was not a
victim of police brutality, and proceeding to smear Jean-Pierre Lizotte's
reputation. Lizotte is not around defend himself, but that doesn't stop cop
lawyers (and the media) from smearing the people killed by the cops.
 Innuendo and rumours have been used against other victims of police
brutality. This Saturday's demonstration is occasion to stand in solidarity
with, and give voice to, all those who have been shot down and smeared by
the cops.


6) "The 43 Reasons"

Anthony Griffin, Jose Carlos Garcia, Yvon Lafrance, Leslie Presley, Paul
McKinnon, Jorge Chavarria-Reyes, Fabien Quienty, Yvan Dugas, Marcellus
François, Armand Fernandez, Osmond Fletcher, Trevor Kelly, Yvon Asselin,
Richard Barnabé, Paolo Romanelli, Martin Suazo, Philippe Ferraro, Nelson
Perreault, Daniel Bélair, Michel Mathurin, Richard Whaley, Yvan Fond-Rouge,
Jean-Pierre Lizotte, Luc Aubert, Sébastien McNicoll, Michael Kibbe, Michel
Morin, Michel Berniquez, Rohan Wilson, Benoît Richer, Mohamed Anas Bennis,
Quilem Registre, Fredy Villaneuva ... and 10 more individuals, women and
men, whose names remain unknown. Together, they represent the 43 people
killed by the Montreal cops in the last 21 years. Saturday's march is for
all victims and survivors of police brutality.


7) The Montreal-Nord riots were justified

This Saturday's demonstration is child-friendly. It will allow for all kinds
of folks to come together in opposition to police brutality. But, that does
not mean we should shy away from defending the justified community uprising
that took place in the aftermath of Fredy Villaneuva's death in August.
Politicians and media have worked overtime to attempt to divide "good"
protesters (the community gatekeepers who stay docile and harmless) from the
"bad" protesters" (those who are willing to take direct action). Saturday's
demonstration is one way to clearly show solidarity with Montreal-Nord,
including the riots that were a justified expression of our collective anger
and rage against police brutality.


8) Accommodate This!

During the xenophobic "debates" around reasonable accommodation in Quebec,
immigrants were essentially being asked to justify their presence in Quebec.
A Montreal cop even recorded a song – played on youtube – telling people
from minority groups to "crisser vos camps" and "retournez chez toi". The
reasonable accommodation debate clouded and confused the unity and
solidarity we share -- as workers, poor, women, queer and trans people,
migrants, and others -- fighting together to achieve real justice. It
distracted from our unity together in confronting poverty, precarity, racism
and racial profiling. This Saturday's protest is another occasion to tell
the xenophobic and racist elements of Quebec society – most embodied by the
cops – to accommodate this! (ie. "go fuck yourselves").


9) Oppose "divide and rule" – Part 2

As part of their divide and rule tactics, the cops have also been visiting
community organizations, asking about their involvement in the demonstration
this coming Saturday. Many community groups have taken a clear stance
against police abuses, and the police response has been to intimidate behind
the scenes, as well as to start a whispering campaign to denounce so-called
radical protesters. We must refuse these police tactics to marginalize the
groups and individuals that have taken principled stances against police
impunity.


10) Oppose sellout "community" gatekeepers

Various levels of government provide substantial money to so-called
"community" organizations to provide basic services. One of the primary
"services" of these groups is to act as "gatekeepers" preventing and
sabotaging grassroots organizing for justice. The so-called "tables de
concertation" in various neighborhoods (funded by the City of Montreal), or
fake coalitions like "Solidarité Montreal-Nord" (also set-up by the City)
basically exist to dilute clear demands that speak to the reality of our
communities. These gatekeepers refuse to clearly denounce racism, racial
profiling and police brutality, and have taken on a prominent role after the
death of Fredy Villaneuva, by denouncing "violence" without ever clearly
denouncing police violence. They are groups comfortable marching with
politicians like Marcel Parent, Gerard Tremblay and Denis Coderre. These
groups are basically breeding grounds for the politicians from all political
parties that will go on to screw us over in other ways. This Saturday's
demonstration is beyond the grasp of the compliant gatekeepers, which is why
it annoys the cops and government so much. Let's annoy them even more with a
huge turnout!


11) Support grassroots community organizing

In contrast to the fake community organizations (who are paid by government
money) and their politician friends, diverse individuals and groups have
engaged in autonomous, grassroots organizing, based on demands that come
from our lived realities in poor and marginalized communities. This kind of
organizing is not easy. We lack resources, and it's hard to find time to
mobilize with our day-to-day grind for survival. But still, various
on-the-ground networks, most notably Montréal-Nord Républik and Mères et
Grandmères pour la vie et la justice, have courageously spoken out clearly
and openly against police impunity.


12) For People Power

Our real power lies in our ability to unify, to break through fear and
isolation, to name our enemy, and to confront it, united in our principles
for social justice and dignity. This Saturday's protest is truly autonomous,
beyond the sway of government-paid community hacks and politicians. It
responds to the demands we know and feel daily. This Saturday's protest is
one model for how we should continue to organize together, within our
communities, and united between communities. Ce n'est qu'un début ...

-----
Final Reminder:
Get to Parc Pilon, at the corner of Henri-Bourassa & Pie-IX by no later than
2pm this Saturday, October 11. Rain or shine, be there. Bring your kids!
Bring your friends!

[To get to Parc Pilon, you can:
-> from Henri-Bourassa metro, take Bus #69 east until rue Gariépy, the stop
just before boulevard Pie-IX, in front of Parc Pilon;
-> or, from Pie-IX metro, take Bus #139 north until rue Amos, in front of
Parc Pilon.]


written and distributed by jbswire at gmail.com
traduction par patcad. merci sofia. a guru collaboration.
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