At least 31 people were arrested in Ferguson, Missouri, last night as protests continued over the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. The cover of today’s St. Louis [Post]-Dispatch has a banner headline reading “Streets Flare Up.” The lead photograph shows a police officer dressed in riot gear shooting tear gas.
A series of startling images were published on Twitter overnight. A human rights monitor from Amnesty International photographed a police armored car charging through the crowd of protesters. Amnesty’s Zeke Johnson wrote, quote, “Insanity as police armored car charges through crowd, lucky no one hurt #ferguson, seems so reckless,” he tweeted. Ben Kesling of The Wall Street Journal published a photo with the caption: “Just saw AR-style rifle with Harris bi-pod on top of armored vehicle. The designated marksmen out again in #Ferguson.” Amanda Sakuma of MSNBC tweeted a photo saying, quote, “Riot police aiming guns at journalists who are on the ground and holding their hands in the air”
At least two journalists were detained overnight, including Ryan Devereaux of The Intercept. Earlier in the day, police arrested photographer Scott Olson of Getty Images.
Reverend Osagyefo Sekou talking:
Last night, protesters had been obeying the order to keep moving. The crowd grew very large to several thousand, and then the police line assembled. Young people are very angry in their tremendous amount of pain, not only because of the death of Mike Brown, but because of a history of abuse by the police in St. Louis County. One young man was completely upset, unconsolable. We worked as clergy to try to restrain him, calm him down, and then all of a sudden an urban tank was deployed, and a garrison of officers came and snatched him out of our hands. Later on that evening, down the street at the other point where the military police had set up, young people were refusing to leave the street, and police deployed tear gas. I was standing there when it happened. A number of us were tear-gassed last night.
What we see now is nothing less than an occupation. I have not felt the way that I feel since I was in Palestine in 2012. In fact, I had to go through a checkpoint. I was asked for my ID to get to this media station. And so, our young people are in a tremendous amount of pain. And an officer who should have been indicted has not been indicted. And let us be sure and be clear in the reality that these young people are engaging in a rich tradition of nonviolent civil disobedience. While there is some violence, but the greatest amount of violence occurred on last Saturday when Mike Brown was shot down like a dog and left—and left in the street for four hours.
Missouri Highway Patrol Captain Ron Johnson said, ” in the midst of chaos, when officers are running around, we’re not sure who’s a journalist and who’s not. And yes, if I see somebody with a $50,000 camera on their shoulder, I’m pretty sure. But some journalists are walking around, and all you have is a cellphone, because you’re from a small media outlet.”
evidently a $50,000 camera will keep you safe, but being a black boy walking down the street in your own community will not. The level of police repression that we are experiencing here is unbelievable. Just over my shoulder, there seems to be hundreds of police cars. Since I have been here—I arrived Friday night—since I have been here, I’ve personally had about a hundred M-16s and AK-47s pointed at me. We were marching on Saturday peacefully, and then all of a sudden tanks appeared—urban tanks appeared out of nowhere and tear-gassed children. That it is a high-level police repression and a violation of the First Amendment, and that journalists are not allowed to do their jobs in order to be able to bear witness to what is happening here on American soil. While drones are being deployed, there are teachers who are telling me in this district that they can’t buy books for their children. And so, this ideal is just completely problematic, and that the provocation that is happening is the high level of military-style police presence here in Ferguson.
it is rather surreal to have spent the last six weeks as a scholar-in-residence at the Martin Luther King papers at Stanford and to get on a plane to fly home and to see the economic realities still at work some 50 years later, thinking about King responding to the Watts riots and the anger that he encountered when he went there by young people who were simply unconsolable when another young black man was shot down like a dog by a policing agency. And so, all of that added a bit of surrealness.
I was part of a group of local clergy. A lot of this work is led by local clergy, local organizations, like the Organization of Black Struggle. And so, we’ve been supporting, trying to calm young folks down, keep them out of harm’s way. I mean, it is a tragedy that as a clergyperson I need a tear gas mask more than I need a collar to be able to do the work that I feel called to do. And so, we’ve been attempting to kind of defuse the situation, de-escalate the young people’s anger, not because their anger is not righteous, that their indignation is righteous indignation, but we’re trying to protect them from the police. And so, in one of those instances—we’re attempting to do that. But let us be clear that we are engaging in work that should be not necessary in a democracy. We should not have to spend our time trying to protect children from police in their own community. And so, we’ve been engaging in that work. But the young people are unconsolable. Their hearts are broken. They’re in a tremendous amount of pain. A number of them we hear over and over again: “I’m ready to die because I don’t have anything to live for.” And so, we’re attempting to engage that in such a way that we protect them, that they might be able to live and to be able to fight another day.
And lastly, I want to say that one of the things people can do nationally is, if you are coming here—and we need more boots on the ground—please contact local organizations, particularly the Organization of Black Struggle or the PICO Network and their local organizers here, to be able to be plugged into supporting the work that needs to be done on the ground. If you’re coming—at the risk of repeating myself, if you’re coming from out of town, please contact the Organization of Black Struggle and other local organizations so you can get your directives from them.
And that we’re asking the media to continue to do your job and to tell your truth and to be able to bear witness to as the Fourth Estate. You must hold accountable police agency and government officials.
And then, lastly, State Senator Jamilah Nasheed and others have created a petition online, a MoveOn petition online, asking for the prosecutor McCulloch to be removed and that a special prosecutor to be assigned. We need an indictment. Officer Wilson should be in jail, not journalists, not the 15 young people I saw arrested trying to leave last night. He needs to be in jail. If he would have been arrested, none—most of this would not be at work. It is a failure of government, and it is a failure of policing agency, and it’s a failure of this nation. It is a crying shame. This nation has betrayed these children with underfunded schools, heavy policing and a heavy militarized experience. America should be ashamed of what it has done to its children, and we will stand with them, and we will defend them with our very lives.
— source democracynow.org
Osagyefo Sekou, pastor from the First Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, who was dispatched to Ferguson by the Fellowship of Reconciliation. He went to high school in St. Louis and has family in Ferguson.