Subj: Minorities Beat by Police
at Powell Protest - Please forward to blogs and lists
-
Date: 11/15/2005 12:22:33 AM Pacific Standard
Time
From: aman.mehrzai @ gmail.com
To: aman.mehrzai @ gmail.com
Police Beat College Students in Violent Protests against
Powell
By AMAN MEHRZAI
Eight people were arrested, mostly college students in a violent
protest against former Secretary of State Colin Powell in
the San Francisco Bay Area, Friday night.
Protesters gathered at De Anza College in the South Bay starting
Wednesday, to kick off a three day rally with visitors such
as Cindy Sheehan and Yuri Kochiyama present.
Chants such as; "Whose College? - Our College. You get
out," and "This is what democracy looks like, this
is what a police state looks like," were heard while
police attacked and beat certain protesters.
Police have been accused of using racial profiling and excessive
force while arresting activists during the demonstrations.
Friday nights protest gained most attention when certain
groups and individuals joined the rally that left destruction
to police vehicles and school property. Police car windows
were smashed and Anarchy symbols were spray painted on the
back of some local media outlet vans. A message that said
"Paris Rising" was tagged on the back of one police
buss.
In order to disperse the crowd, fully armed riot police in
multiple groups of 15 to 20 spread out and chased anyone who
was present including reporters and legal observers. One group
of riot police moved the remaining crowd down the campus pushing
them through bushes and assaulting them with their gear. Another
group of troops crossed the street into commercial property
forcing a corridor around the block, in order to peruse and
arrest certain protesters they had spotted earlier in the
crowd, who were on their way to their cars.
Some of the protesters went inside a local coffee shop across
campus out of fear of the riot police who were quickly approaching
them. "At one point, the riot police surrounded the coffee
shop and one undercover officer with an earpiece came inside
and waited outside the bathroom door and was staring at me
when I was going in," said protester Susan Barrientos.
Barrientos is a Muslim convert who was dressed in Islamic
attire.
Some protesters who were arrested were previously refused
access to their cars when they wanted to leave, and were later
beaten and captured in plain view of many eyewitnesses and
legal observers.
Out of seven of the protesters who were arrested outside
of the Flint Center, six were Muslims of Arabic and African
descent, some members of the Student Muslim Association. "They
[police] saw that we had the most energy and were not afraid
of them and were riling up the crowd," said De Anza student
Hanni Zaki, 22, who was hospitalized for receiving injury
to the head from police who stepped on his face and beat him
with their batons. "They couldn't stand that we were
dressed in Palestinian and Arabic clothes and weren't afraid
of them. They wanted revenge so they chased down, every one
of us who were Muslim, until they could beat and arrest us,
that's what they were waiting for, that's why they wouldn't
let me go to my car." De Anza's Students for Justice
Member, Mark Anthony Medeiras, asked police to go to his car
and was allowed to leave, minutes before Zaki was beaten and
arrested. Zaki, who parked in the same garage as Medeiras,
was refused access to his vehicle and when he asked how he
was supposed to leave, was told, "You should of thought
of that earlier," by one of the riot police who leaned
over with his baton to start the attack by multiple officers.
De Anza student Abdul Kareem Al-Hayiek, 19, was chased by
two officers on their dirt bikes until they knocked him down
and pepper sprayed him in the face. Al-Heyiek began choking
while officers jumped on top of him; he soon after lost consciousness.
Another De Anza student Aiman Eltilib, 17, who just got out
of class that night pleaded for the officer to get off of
Al-Hayiek and was also pepper sprayed in the face and told
by an officer, "Do you want to end up like him?"
Eltilib responded by asking the officers to let Al-Hayiek
go and that "he didn't do anything." The officer
then put his left arm around the minor's neck and choked his
Adams apple with the fingertips of his right hand until he
collapsed to the ground. Shakir Eljurf, 19, who attended the
same night class with Eltilib walked towards his classmate
in concern, with books still under his right arm, when a third
officer from behind twisted his left arm behind his back without
warning, but was alarmed to find an angry mob pursuing them
from behind. All three were then quickly released as the officers
retreated to take cover from the approaching mob.
Two other Muslim students, Mohammad Abdo, 23, and Adonnis
Graves, 22, ran towards the local media vans for safe haven
after riot police hit Graves in the face with a baton and
forced him through a high bush, only to be rescued by Abdo
who pulled him to safety.The two nearly made it to the news
reporters, but were blocked off by officers on motorcycles
who told them to get off campus. They crossed the street and
walked through a public park to get to their cars where officers
apprehended and arrested them both.
Elgrie Hurd, 24, an African American student from San Jose
State University was asked by officers to back off the edge
of a street. Although Hurd was complying, officers dragged
him forward by his shirt and arrested in plain view. Many
photographers took footage of the incident. He was charged
with Battery on a Peace Officer and False report of a bomb.
Protester, Brian Helmle, was the first to be arrested inside
the Flint Center earlier that night, during Powell's speech
and was charged for Disturbing the Peace and Resisting Arrest.
Helmle, who is 27, stood up while Powell was speaking about
the virtues of American kindness and yelled out "Liar
- liar, murderer – murderer," and blew his whistle
until officers carried him across the stands to arrest him.
Helmle, who later met with other arrestees, was shocked to
find that they were treated with such harshness and brutality
and that he was the only Caucasian to be arrested that night.
"I think that this is all about white privilege,"
said Helmle. "I wasn't treated in any harshness whatsoever
by the police. The fact is that the eyes of the white crowd
were on a white male doing strange things inside. What happened
to those outside in the protest is ridiculous and racist.
All they were trying to do was leave and get to their cars.
I was intentionally trying to get arrested."
Police released Helmle by 1 a.m. that same night without
taking him into custody. The seven others who were arrested
outside the Flint Center were taken into custody, including
the minor Eltilib, and detained overnight in harsh conditions.
Al-Hayiek is the only one to still be in custody awaiting
an arraignment for bond.
In 1984 the Santa Calra County was sued by the law offices
of Carpenter and Mayfield when police sweeped a large number
of protesters on De Anza College and illegally detained them
on a parking lot during a demonstration against Ronald Reagan.
One officer, who was at the protests on Friday night said,
"Although profiling shouldn't happen, when certain people
dress the way they do they become a target. It shouldn't happen,
but the reality is that when most officers see someone dressed
in that kind of clothes [Middle Eastern], they associate that
with terrorism." The officer said that they regularly
attend terrorism training classes, and that many officers
associate such garb to terrorists because of the training
videos they see in which "terrorists prepare themselves
for Jihad and martyrdom."
Multiple legal organizations are investigating the allegations
that police singled out the Middle Eastern and African American
protesters, although the majority of the violence was conducted
by others. Excessive force allegations will also be a focus
of the investigations.
###
|