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The U.N. Petition
From Covert Action Quarterly
26 October 1998
On December 11, 1978, attorney Lennox Hinds, on
behalf of the National Conference of Black Lawyers, the National
Alliance Against Racism, and the Commission for Racial Justice of
the United Church of Christ, sent a petition to the United Nations
Commission on Human Rights alleging a "consistent pattern of
gross...violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms of certain
classes of political prisoners in the United States because of their
race, economic status, and political beliefs."
The petition, referring to the case of Assata Shakur,
stated that, "The FBI and the New York Police Departments,
in particular, charged and accused Assata Shakur of participating
in attacks on law enforcement personnel, and widely circulated such
charges and accusations among police agencies and units. The FBI
and the NYPD further charged her as being a leader of the Black
Liberation Army, which the government and its respective agencies
described as an organization engaged in the shooting of police officers.
This description of the Black Liberation Army and the accusation
of Assata Shakur's relation to it was widely circulated by government
agents among police agencies and units. As a result of these activities
by the government, Ms Shakur became a hunted person; posters in
police precincts and banks described her as being involved in serious
criminal activities; she was highlighted on the FBI's most wanted
list; and to police at all levels she became a "shoot to kill
target"
In response to the petition, seven international
jurists visited a number of prisons on August 3-20, 1979, and reported
their findings... They listed four categories of prisoners, the
first of which were political prisoners, defined as "a class
of victims of FBI misconduct through the COINTELPRO strategy and
other forms of illegal government conduct who as political activists
have been selectively targeted for provocation, false arrests, entrapment,
fabrication of evidence, and spurious criminal prosecutions. This
class is exemplified by at least: The Wilmington Ten, the Charlotte
Three, Assata Shakur, Sundiata Acoli, Imari Obadele and other Republic
of New Africa defendants, David Rice, Ed Poindexter, Elmer Geronimo
Pratt, Richard Marshall, Russell Means, Ted Means, and other American
Indian Movement defendants."
"One of the worst cases," they wrote,
"is that of Assata Shakur, who spent over twenty months in
solitary confinement in two separate men's prisons subject to conditions
totally unbefitting any prisoner. Many more months were spent in
solitary confinement in mixed or all-women's prisons. Presently,
after protracted litigation, she is confined at Clinton Correctional
Facility for Women in maximum security. She has never on any occasion
been punished for any infraction of prison rules which might in
any way justify such cruel or unusual punishment." |