As Resistance to Stryker Shipment Grows, Police Turn Violent
author: Tacoma Port Militarization Resistance
Mar 10, 2007 22:21
Following an afternoon rally at the Federal Courthouse in Tacoma on Friday, members of Port Militarization Resistance staged a peaceful demonstration at the Port of Tacoma, where they were met by Tacoma Police. Later, police turned violent and launched tear gas and rubber bullets at activists as they sat chanting peace slogans.
Cops and demonstrators get lots of one-on-one time this week. |
Tacoma, WA, March 10, 2007 ― Activists opposed to a military shipment bound for Iraq continued their week long campaign with a rally in downtown Tacoma and a demonstration at the Port of Tacoma. They are protesting the deployment of a Ft. Lewis-based Stryker brigade deploying to Iraq as part of the US escalation of the conflict.
At an afternoon rally at the Federal Courthouse, anti-war activists from throughout Western Washington and Oregon held signs and listened to speakers denounce the US mission in Iraq and call for active resistance to the escalation.
Among those at the Port of Tacoma Friday night was TJ Johnson, an Olympia City councilman who is a part of Olympia Port Militarization Resistance. Johnson, the winner of the 2006 Dr. Paul Beeson award from Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility and a well-known anti-nuclear activist, told the crowd “We have a moral obligation and a growing sense of urgency to make it clear that we want to keep soldiers safe at home, and spend our tax dollars to meet humanitarian needs, here and in the Middle East.”
Also speaking at the rally was Lynn Stewart, a nationally renowned New York civil rights attorney.
After the rally hundreds of activists from Bellingham, Port Townsend, South Sound and Portland converged on the Port of Tacoma to continue to demonstrate their opposition to the military shipments. The large crowd vowed to continue the protest, and has issued a broad appeal to opponents of the war to come to Tacoma to join in this public demonstration of dissent from the Bush administration's Iraq policy.
Later in the evening one of the activists was arrested for trying to enter the protest zone with a backpack full of food and medical supplies. Police said Tom McCarthy of Tacoma had violated a police ban on backpacks in the area, and they confiscated his backpack. A large crowd gathered, challenging the arrest just before 11:37 pm. Police continue to refuse backpacks inside the designated “protest zone” even after repeated admonitions from at least two attorneys citing Ninth Circuit legal precedent determining that such bans violate Fourth Amendment privacy rights.
According to Mark Jensen of Pierce United for Peace and Justice, “Around midnight, the crowd was still growing. As police donned gas masks and distributed ammunition for crowd control, an additional unit of about 70 riot police made up of personnel from various nearby police departments arrived by bus. Massing near a fence on 11th Ave around 1:00 am, a few young people tested its strength, causing it to swing wildly. Police fired what one person believed to be pepper spray, briefly scattering the crowd while police moved quickly to reinforce the fence.”
Demonstrators then began walking away from the fence and south on Thorne Ave. Mike Pinson of Tacoma reports that “We went on a long march back around to another access point. There were at least 250 people chanting the entire time while a police car in reverse and one moving forward paced the head of the pack as we advanced.”
When demonstrators reached the other access point following a one mile walk, they were met with a large police presence. The police were in full riot gear, including gas masks.
Some of the demonstrators crossed a yellow tape-line police set up, sat down and began chanting and singing songs. According to Phan Nguyen, a member of Olympia Port Militarization Resistance, “At this point riot police responded by launching multiple volleys of tear gas and rapid firing rubber bullets into the crowd.”
Independent media videographers were present, and films of the event have already been posted on www.youtube.com. Local television stations that have been covering the Port of Tacoma demonstrations were not present Friday night.
Despite the police violence on Friday, demonstrators have no plans to discontinue their campaign. “The fact that they had to choose a different, less accessible port and then sneak the equipment in under cover of darkness shows just how little public support there is for the ongoing quagmire in Iraq” said Wes Hamilton, a Vietnam veteran and member of the Olympia chapter of Veterans for Peace. He added, “The best way to support the troops is to prevent them from being placed into the midst of a civil war where they have a high risk of killing or being killed. We have a moral and humanitarian obligation to resist the use of our port.”
The port resistance campaign has been endorsed by the Veterans for Peace #109 (Rachel Corrie Chapter), Olympia Chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War, Green Party of South Puget Sound, Olympia Movement for Justice and Peace, Students for a Democratic Society, Olympia Unitarian Universalist Social Justice Committee, United for Peace Pierce County, Students for a Democratic Society, the Alliance for Democracy, the Olympia Movement for Justice and Peace, and the Movement Against War and Occupation in Vancouver BC.
One YouTube link where video of Port of Tacoma actions are being posted is here:
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=Acumensch
Two specific clips so far are:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hIIuJK_Uh8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IfhUaUuG1sM
For more information contact:
Caitlin Esworthy
413-522-6558
Phan Nguyen
360-352-4172
Tom McCarthy
253-250-9290
wandertom@yahoo.com
Patrick Edelbacher
925-518-9060
sharkeye@riseup.net
add a comment on this article
Posted by: shano at Mar 12, 2007 13:22
This film made me cry.
For you all and for America, now, in the new century.
Posted by: Joe Rowe at Mar 12, 2007 23:18
related link on Portland Oregon media site:
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2007/03/355392.shtml
Police in Oakland attacked and the city had to pay out $2 million
Posted by: an at Mar 13, 2007 05:36
just a message of solidarity to all the folks who have been involved in the ongoing port protests:
stay strong...your actions have inspired many around the nation, and will continue to inspire as word spreads...by taking risks and prompting clouds of tear-gas and pepper-spray from overzealous police, the folks in tacoma may be incidentally responsible for shifting the tone of this movement from one of complacency to one of urgency.
solidarity!
Posted by: Plenum at Mar 13, 2007 12:36
I'm in Athens, Greece and read of your actions in Tacoma on the Common Dreams email/newsletter... I wish I could be with you. Keep it up! Keep it going... Stay strong.
We have weekly, downtown demonstrations that get quite active - gas, rocks, rubber-bullets, the like. People get hurt but make it back onto the streets. And, an anti-war demo infront of the US embassy this weekend. The war-maddened factions in the USA need to be stopped. Iraq is an absolute fiasco - protest is good.
Posted by: TG at Mar 14, 2007 01:02
In the absence of any real sanity on the part of congressional representatives the people are forced to take to the streets to assert the will of the people.
In fact, the majority of U.S. citizens are against the Iraq occupation and want the troops to get out now. In fact, most people know this administration is a "cabal" that has infiltrated the state apparatus to execute an agenda for corporate gains--this implies facism.
If these the administration of U.S. really cared about the republic of this country of United States of America they would be forcing corporations to comply with their corporate charters to serve in an interest to public good. Yeah yeah stockholders bottom-line but hey if there is nobody left to buy your BS then you can't move your product. This also calls into question the credibility of the G8, Worldbank, WTO, IMF, and all other institutions that try to usurp the soverignty of peoples and their lands and their local economies/governmental jurisdiction. Most folks know that localism serves the people best and consolidations of power do not. The majority of people/souls of the earth are not interested in being slaves (corporate feudalism) and it is time to stop the "masters".
The military industrial complex and the defense contractors and all the other "contractors" who rebuild after destroying are creating a false economy one that only will truly realize a "point of diminishing returns".
It is time to kick out the folks who don't "get it" ban them from ever serving on a board in corporate or public service.
Go strong Protestors you are on the right side of the fight. Save the troops from the abuse of the federal government's foriegn policies (the U.S. troops are being misused by this administration--U.S. troops are trained to defend our country not to go fight wars for corporate interests). For people who don't understand geo-politics I urge you to get a clue. We are all living on a special blue planet with finite resources and war is actually obsolete (considering technological advances and the pollution that also kills).
Also the race of mankind (male in gender) who are continually engaged in an old model of behaving need to evovle and get with the vision of being on a special planet with finite resources. Stop killing women and children and other men and polluting the planet with your territorial pissings. Transcend your repressive programming and realize you are being called to be the glory you where meant to be.
Love your neighbor and figure out how to co-habitate on this planet together without exploiting, poisioning, and terrorizing one another.
The future of humanity is calling your name.
Now is the time all you others out there Riseup in your own communities and resist the corpate facism of overuse of military systems and foreign policy that will truly destroy us all in the long run (forget shortterm corporate stockholder returns). Resist the illegal and immoral facist activities of the current U.S. administration. Stay strong. Be creative and remember your soul has value.
Solidarity!
Posted by: with non-violence at Mar 20, 2007 19:55
Keep going! The whole world is watching!