Hey all,
I got a message from our friends at Rutgers - New Brunswick, NJ about three of their activists getting citations for disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor which could lead to up to 30 days in jail and a $500 fine. They were the only three out of hundreds of protesters during their March 27th protest against the war in Iraq to be arrested. I've attached a press release below, but it would be really cool for some of us in the March 20th working group to sign on to their petition that they will be circulating as part of the March 20th working group of SDS. If you want to sign on, please email
monkeyw...@hotmail.com.
Lets support our fellow activists!
Kati
Walkout Coalition To Hold Press Conference Tomorrow to Support Rutgers Students Prosecuted for Protesting Iraq War!
Charges Especially Contentious as Walkout Was Widely Reported as Peaceful with Police Pleased
New
Brunswick, NJ – Tuesday April 22, 2008 – Three Rutgers students, Erik
Straub, a Rutgers College junior and member of Tent State
University/Students for a Democratic Society, Suzan Sanal, a Douglass
College junior and member of Rutgers Against the War, and Arwa Ibrahim,
a Rutgers College senior, have been issued summons for activities that
took place during the March 27, 2008 Rutgers Walk Out Against the War.
These three students will be issuing a statement at a press conference
immediately preceding their first trial date this coming Wednesday,
April 23rd at 11:00AM during the Tent State University event located on
the College Avenue campus of Rutgers in New Brunswick, NJ. The press
conference will take place at the Vietnam War Memorial on Voorhees Mall.
The
Walkout brought together about 600 Rutgers students and supporters, who
walked out on their daily routine and rallied in protest of the war in
Iraq. The Walkout culminated in a march, with an estimated 300
participants, that took a path through the streets of downtown New
Brunswick and onto nearby highway Route 18.
Despite the fact
that the action involved hundreds of students, police singled out only
three for prosecution. Furthermore, while for the second year in a row
the protest yielded no injuries, no arrests, and no incidents of
vandalism or property damage, the New Brunswick Police Department is
charging the three students with 'recklessly creating … a hazardous or
physically dangerous condition by an act which serves no legitimate
purpose.'
"91 Rutgers students will be shipped to Iraq beginning
this month; Rutgers students are significantly more likely to be put
into harm's way due to the criminally negligent actions of President
Bush than they ever will be attending a protest in New Brunswick,"
replied Jean Pierre Mestanza, a member of the Walkout Coalition "The
only hazardous and dangerous situation that has been created has been
the result of the decision by the US government to invade Iraq."
Mestanza went on to cite a recent report by the National Institute for
Strategic Studies, a respected Defense Department research center,
which referred to the Iraq war as "a major debacle."
Reactions among organizers of the Walkout have been mixed.
"I
called my parents as soon as I found out," said a participant at the
Walkout who wishes to remain anonymous. "I was worried when I heard
they were prosecuting students because I was helping to organize during
the march that day too. My job was mainly to walk around and make sure
nothing got out of hand. One officer even thanked me after the event;
I'm not sure if he opposed the war too or if he was just glad for the
assistance we were providing by circulating through the crowd and
keeping the situation calm and under control."
Other students took a different view.
"This
is quite clearly selective political prosecution with the intent to
intimidate organizers and prevent future protests from happening," said
Adriel Bernal, a Walkout participant and member of Tent State
University/Students for a Democratic Society. "They don't want us
protesting against the war even if we're being peaceful and nonviolent.
If we can't even protest peacefully in our own city, it's clear that
our voices will never be strong enough to reach those in power
elsewhere."
"While they're busy putting students on trial, they
should be arresting the real criminals: the architects of the war,"
Bernal concluded.
The Walkout Coalition has issued the following
demands in regards to the charges against Arwa, Suzan, and Erik, which
they hope will be echoed and supported by the residents of New
Brunswick, the Rutgers community, and peace and justice advocates
across the United States and beyond:
To the New Brunswick
Prosecutor's Office: Drop all charges against the Rutgers students
being prosecuted in relation to the 2008 Walkout Against the War.
To
the City of New Brunswick: Students are being prosecuted for peacefully
opposing the war. It is obvious that the voice of students is not being
considered in City Hall. Therefore, we demand student seats on the New
Brunswick City Council to represent our student neighborhoods. Student
representation for our student wards! (
www.empowernb.com)
As for
Erik Straub, one of the students being prosecuted, he is trying to take
everything in stride. "We all want our sisters and brothers in the
military to come home," Straub explained. "While I don't relish the
idea of spending any time in a jail cell, countless others have
sacrificed even more in this unjust war. I am convinced we will defeat
these unjust charges, but whatever happens, I believe I have a moral
imperative to do whatever is required from me in the nonviolent pursuit
of freedom from occupation for the Iraqi people and an end to the war."