[NYTr] Katrina-Rita tribunal to focus on U.S. crimes

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Mon Jul 23 13:03:23 EDT 2007


Workers World - Jul 26, 2007 issue
http://www.workers.org/2007/us/katrina-rita-0726

Aug. 29-Sept. 2:

Katrina-Rita tribunal to focus on U.S. crimes

By Dustin Langley
New York

July 17 at the Center for Constitutional Rights in Manhattan community
organizers from Louisiana, progressive attorneys and elected officials
announced that the International Tribunal on Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita will be held in New Orleans from Aug. 29 to Sept. 2, marking the
second anniversary of the Katrina disaster. The tribunal will include
hurricane survivors, expert witnesses, international delegations, a
team of human rights and civil rights prosecutors, and a panel of
U.S.-based and international judges.

Attorney Joan Gibbs of Medgar Evers Center for Law and Social Justice,
who will also be part of the prosecution team, chaired the news
conference. Speakers included Kwame Kalimara of the Malcolm X
Grassroots Movement; former Georgia Congress Member Cynthia McKinney;
New York City Council Member Charles Barron; Kali Akuno of the Peoples
Hurricane Relief Fund; and Viola François-Washington, an organizer with
the Peoples Hurricane Relief Fund and Executive Director for the
Welfare Rights Organization.

Kalimara opened by announcing that President George W. Bush and
Governors Kathleen Blanco and Haley Barbour (of Louisiana and
Mississippi respectively) had all been officially advised that the
Tribunal would be trying the U.S. government for crimes against
humanity and genocide under the U.N. Charter, the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, and other relevant international agreements following
the hurricanes that hit the Gulf Coast almost two years ago.

McKinney cited as an example of the crimes committed the incident at
the Gretna Bridge, when more than a hundred hungry and thirsty Katrina
survivors—mostly African-American—tried to flee across to dry land
right after New Orleans was flooded in 2005 and were prevented from
crossing by racist Gretna police officers, who fired on the crowd and
shouted racist epithets.

McKinney also cited the suspension of the Second Amendment right to
bear arms by Michael Chertoff, secretary of Homeland Security.
Survivors found that their own weapons were confiscated, while
mercenaries from Blackwater and other corporations were sent in to
patrol the streets. “Instead of sending food, they sent men with guns,”
McKinney said.

She pointed out that the blame for the ongoing disaster falls on both
major political parties. “Bush was criticized for not mentioning
Katrina in his 2007 State of the Union address, but Pelosi also failed
to mention it in the Democratic Party’s first one hundred days in
power.”

Barron said that the tribunal would be an opportunity to shed light on
important institutional issues, including race, class and gender
issues. He said, “We need to put enough pressure to put Katrina on the
top of the agenda. Black people cannot let the government get away with
what they did, because they left our people to die.”

Viola François-Washington, a Katrina survivor on the Gretna Bridge
during the infamous incident, reported on the complete lack of any
assistance during and after the storm. “We saw helicopters flying all
over the city, but no one was helping us,” she said.

The racism that denied help to people during the disaster is still very
much a reality. “We still have two cities,” François-Washington said.
“One is getting help and the other has not.”

For more information on the tribunal, see www.internationaltribunal.org.

Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.

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