Angela Davis Rallies to Free Ed Poindexter, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Leonard Peltier

19 Aug 1970 — Original caption: 8/19/1970-Washington, DC -Angela Yvonne Davis, a self admitted communist, has been added to the FBI’s list of “Ten Most Wanted Fugitives.” The FBI issued this wanted flyer August 18. Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS. Angela Davis was on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list (credit: Federal Bureau of Investigation)

by   Speaking to the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression recently, Angela Davis renewed her call to release black prisoners she says were convicted for their political beliefs, not because they were guilty. The event was a rally to

Davis spoke about the need for international solidarity opposing institutionalized police violence against those engaged in political conduct around the world. Davis said, “Anti-Muslim racism, Islamophobia has to be understood as intersecting with and reinvigorating anti-Black, anti-Asian, anti-Latinos racism.”

Davis has her own history with oppression. A Communist leader, Davis was charged in August 1970 with supplying weaponry used in a fatal jailbreak attempt at the Marin County Courthouse in California. Continue reading “Angela Davis Rallies to Free Ed Poindexter, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Leonard Peltier”

Jailed for a tweet: Free Nabeel and all 600 Uprising Prisoners

Bahrain rights activist Nabeel Rajab acquitted over tweet, still in jail

31 Sept.  Protesters carry posters of activist Nabeel Rajab, who was sentenced to three years in prison [EPA]
Tens of thousands of people chanting anti-government slogans and holding up pictures of jailed activists have taken part in Bahrain’s first authorised opposition protest since June.
No clashes occurred at Friday’s march along a three kilometre stretch of a highway west of the capital Manama.
Protesters carried Bahraini flags and held up images of rights activist and protest leader Nabeel Rajab, calling for his release.
Bahrain, where the US Fifth Fleet is based, has been in crisis since a revolt led by majority Shia Muslims began 18 months ago to demand democracy in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.

A court in Bahrain has acquitted human rights activist Nabeel Rajab of insulting Bahrainis by criticizing the prime minister via Twitter, but remains in jail on other charges, his lawyer said.

Rajab said he had been “subjected to psychological and physical torture” while speaking in court on Thursday, International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) President Souhayr Belhassen said.

Despite complains of ill treatment, Rajab will remain in jail, as a lower Bahraini court later added three years to the veteran human rights on three counts of leading protests. The prosecution further claimed he had incited violence against police. Rajab is set to appeal the later conviction in September.

The United States had previously said it was “deeply troubled” by the verdict, but its hypocritical criticism remained mostly muted as the US Fifth Fleet – which is in a major build to attack Iran – operates out of Manama base. Continue reading “Jailed for a tweet: Free Nabeel and all 600 Uprising Prisoners”