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- LAPD Opens Dangerous Front in
Immigrant Movement
- By Roberto Lovato
- New America Media, Commentary
May 08, 2007
After participating in more than 50 small and large immigration vigils
and marches in Los Angeles' MacArthur Park, little of what happens there
surprises me. The many acts of Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD)
violence I witnessed – the choke-holds on 50-year-old female street
vendors, the blood of marchers spilled on grass by baton-wielding cops,
and me myself being hit – never really scared me. That is, until now.
- As I sat stupefied before images of gunshots raining on immigrants
whose only weapons were baby carriages and bongos, I saw the LAPD dragging
the immigrants and the entire country into dangerous terrain, a new
threshold in the tug of immigration war raging around the country.
In my almost 20 years (several of which I spent in a crowded office down
the block from the park as the executive director of the Central American
Resource Center, CARECEN) of working in the immigrant community, I've
watched the very gradual escalation of anti-immigrant sentiment; I’ve
watched us move from the wave of verbal and visual assaults against
immigrants following small rallies against California’s Proposition 187 in
MacArthur Park which denied social services to those without papers, to
the wave of verbal, visual and now physical attacks carpeting the entire
country. Among the 70 injured and hospitalized last Tuesday were
Salvadorans, Guatemalans and others who fled situations where the gradual
growth and normalization of verbal and visual violence against specific
groups preceded violence against those same groups.
The 240 "less than lethal" shots fired by LAPD sent powerful concentric
waves of trauma and media messages – seven journalists were among the
injured – felt from the crowded brown brick apartments in Pico Union to
the tobacco fields of Dudley, North Carolina as well as in homes
throughout the hemisphere.
As Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa visited post-war El Salvador on
the day of the incident, people there watched their six-o’clock local news
with enthusiasm – after all, Los Angeles could be called the second
largest Salvadoran city. But the cheer and goodwill quickly evaporated as
they watched on their ten o’clock international news the all-too-familiar
images: heavily armed men in black uniforms and riot gear firing shotguns
at fellow Salvadorans and Mexicans and other immigrants, including
four-year-old girls and 70-year-old grandmothers.
With the whole world watching, Chief Bratton and Mayor Villaraigosa, who
owes his election to the post-Proposition 187 wave of Latino electoral
power, must deal swiftly and in unprecedented ways with the shocking new
threshold set by the LAPD if trust in the community, the city and the
entire continent are to be repaired. The dangerous new precedent appears
to many in the community to signal open season on immigrants in a country
where they inspire such intense passions and hatred; such a situation
requires local authorities to persuade many in the community that this
most recent incident was not planned or provoked to repress immigrants.
Some activists, like Javier Rodriguez, one of the march organizers, are
already calling the MacArthur Park incident a “political decision” to
“dismantle this (immigrant rights) movement.” Whether or not such claims
are true, many born in the United States heard in the gunshots echoes of
Kent State. Anchors on the Spanish language Univision network drew angry
comparisons with the shooting of former Univision reporter Ruben Salazar
who was killed by an L.A. County sheriff’s deputy during a march against
the Vietnam War in 1970, while community members born in other parts of
America like El Salvador saw flashes of Plaza Barrios, also a site of
police violence.
With deeply rooted fears growing and expanding in the immigrant community
and with the pall of institutional violence still hanging heavily over the
LAPD, it may not serve the city to simply establish another in the
seemingly endless string of commissions investigating violence and other
misconduct: the McCone Commission following the Watts riots, the
Christopher Commission following the Rodney King beating, the Webster
Commission following the riots of 1992, the reform recommendations
following the Rampart scandal. During my tenure at CARECEN, then the
country’s largest immigrant-serving organization, I attended dozens of
meetings about police violence against immigrants with everybody from the
former captain and other officers of the notorious Rampart Station to U.S.
attorney generals, mayors, blue ribbon commission members and others who
guaranteed “getting to the bottom” of official violence. Despite the
assurances, the thick reports full of recommendations, the FBI
investigations, and the promises to protect “civil rights,” police reform
still seems like a bottomless pit of impunidad (impunity) to immigrants,
youth, African-Americans and others.
Quelling concerns with FBI investigations and the language and
institutional practice of “civil rights” may not be enough, especially
among those who have experienced actual results from language and
practices rooted in “human rights.” "The way the local police physically
abused marchers represents right there a violation of human rights," said
Jorge A. Bustamante, U.N. special rapporteur on the human rights of
migrants, during a visit to Los Angeles last week. Linking the MacArthur
Park incident to the larger context informing the violence, he added,
“There is concern in the United Nations human rights community about
rising anti-immigrant sentiment in the United States."
In the search for answers and responsibility, Mayor Villaraigosa would do
well to look back to countries like El Salvador or Mexico, where the
determination of responsibility for such incidents includes identifying
possible "intellectual authors", special civilian Truth Commissions (as
opposed to the previous commissions) and other measures. In the absence of
new approaches to eradicate endemic police violence, Los Angeles should,
in its efforts to be transparent, consider inviting international groups
who monitor and report on violence and abuses of human rights of migrants
around the world. Whether or not “autores intelectuales” (intellectual
authors) of the violence exist and whatever form the inevitable claims of
a cover-up take, local authorities must address the MacArthur Park
incident in new ways, ways that leave no doubt that immigrants were not
targeted for political reasons, for being the most vulnerable.
- _______________________________________________________
- Article at:
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=3eb84f36a3108e0ed43c6a9eaa057682
- Contact Roberto Lovato at:
Robvato@aol.com
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