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Left to right: Niki Adams,
(LAW); Diapha Diallo-Gibert,
Just Justice for Mumia (USA);
Dr
Michael
Schiffmann,
author of Race Against
Death. Mumia Abu-Jamal:
a Black Revolutionary in
White America (Germany);
Mr Robert R. Bryan,
lead counsel for Mumia Abu
Jamal (USA); Claude
Guillaumaud and Jacky
Hortaut, Collectif Unitaire
National de Soutien Mumia
Abu-Jamal (France).
Speech by
Niki Adams, Legal Action for Womenfor Panel “Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Symbol of the Fight
Against the Death Penalty”, organised by
Collectif Unitaire
National de Soutien Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Chairs: Mr Jacky Hortaut and Mr Robert R Bryan
Legal Action
for Women (LAW) is an anti-sexist, anti-racist, legal
service, founded in 1982, for low income women and their
families based in London.
Together with
the Global Women’s Strike (GWS) -- an international network
of women in 60 countries -- we have supported Mumia
Abu-Jamal for many years. In 2004, Selma James (GWS) and I
asked to visit Mumia as we wanted to ask his advice on
racism in Philadelphia where one of the US GWS co-ordinating
groups is based. The anti-war movement was operating in a
city that is 70% Black and therefore overwhelmingly
anti-war, but the visible movement was white. He was very
glad to be in touch, particularly with Selma, whose writings
he had read in prison along with the work of her husband CLR
James. In October of that year we visited him.
We were so
stunned by him so we decided to work out how we could be
helpful. We have some legal expertise so we looked to see
what we could do with our particular networks to enhance the
international campaign that has kept Mumia alive all these
years.
We know that
cases are often not won in court, that
what happens in a court is
very often related to and dependent on what is happening
outside of the court, in the street and in the movement
generally. Proof of this is Mumia’s campaign which
has kept him alive. We also know the importance of
scrupulous legal work as we have seen many cases lost that
shouldn’t have been because of lazy, incompetent or even
corrupt lawyers. So we were glad when Mumia put us in touch
with his dedicated lawyer, Robert Bryan, who has managed
through his efforts to turn the case around and get it back
to court with an appeal which if successful will lead to a
new trial.
Robert told
us that what was needed was to change the climate of
opposition to Mumia in Pennsylvania so that when the case is
heard there the court will listen to the evidence and not
base their decision on the campaign of misinformation from
the police and media. We know that Robert wins cases and we
do what a winner says.
We approached
Ian Macdonald QC, a distinguished UK lawyer and a good
friend of ours. We drafted and he reworked a letter for
lawyers to sign acknowledging Mumia as a jailhouse lawyer
and protesting at the racism of Mumia’s case. He gave us
lists of people to contact for signatures and we circulated
it among our wide network of lawyers. The response was
extraordinary. Within a week over 100 signed. The letter
now has over
150 signatories, including leading criminal lawyers and in
some cases household names in the UK as well as
those with experience of
doing appeals in the Privy Council in death penalty cases
from the Caribbean and those experienced in race and gender
discrimination cases.
Some
committed lawyers knew nothing of Mumia’s case until they
saw the letter so it was an educational exercise. A number
were astonished at the depth of injustice of his trial and
treatment. All saw it as a serious initiative against the
death penalty and to save Mumia’s life.
The letter stressed the
urgency of the Courts redressing the racism in Mumia’s case
in the light of the Katrina hurricane disaster, when
television viewers in every country of the world witnessed
an unparalleled display of racism on a massive scale,
allowed (some would say enabled) by the US government.
The letter
was sent to the US courts, timed to coincide with amicus
curie briefs from the National Lawyers Guild and the NAACP
LDF. It is published with signatures in this pamphlet* and
has been translated into French, Spanish and German. We are
glad to be here to be part of a European network in support
of Mumia and to extend that network. We are glad that
Claude
Guillaumaud from Le Collectif Unitaire National pour le
Soutien de Mumia Abu-Jamal (United
National Collective for the Support of
Mumia Abu-Jamal) was able to speak at our event in
London of her work and we want to continue that kind of
exchange.
We are dedicated to getting Mumia out
because he is part of the same movement as us, the same
anti-racist movement, the same anti sexist movement, the
same anti-death penalty movement, that is, the same
anti-capitalist movement.
We know that Mumia’s case
has grave consequences for all of us. If the death penalty
lives in the US then it is lurking everywhere. The UK
government’s endorsement of the execution of Saddam Hussein
under a regime it helps control (despite the belated and
mild protests at the way that it was conducted) indicates
that, given the chance, it would resurrect legalized
murder.
Now with Margaret
Prescod, drive-time host on US Pacifica Radio’s KPFK and
Women of Colour in the Global Women’s Strike, we are
launching a letter for journalists to sign protesting at the
targeting of Mumia, for his independent campaigning
journalism. It connects the way that Mumia has been
targeted with the targeting of many journalists who
insist on their right to report what they know and who have
lost their lives as a result – many at the hands of the US
state. The shooting of Italian Giuliana Sgrena by US troops
is just one example as well as the murder of 146 other
journalists in Iraq, many by US military. We’ll hear more
from Linn Washington of the campaign of misinformation in
the press promoted by the police at the time of Mumia’s
arrest, trial and since. Unlike the
lawyer’s letter which was primarily for UK lawyers to sign,
the letter from journalists can be circulated
internationally. We urge you to take copies and gather
signatures.
This is a moment in time
as the movement begins to re-emerge that Mumia can do
wonderful work outside for, among others, those inside who
we are determined to get out. We are demanding a new trial
because we take our direction in our work on his case from
Mumia and that is what he is working for. It is a tribute
to the quality of the man, to his relentless determination
to stay alive in defiance of a genocidal state, that so many
of us are gathered here today in his support. We look
forward to working more closely together with you and
winning justice for Mumia.

Robert Bryan,
lead counsel for Mumia
Abu Jamal, USA with Bianca Jagger,
Goodwill Ambassador for the Council of
Europe and campaigner against the
death penalty.
Mumia Abu-Jamal
supporters on the March Against the Death Penalty 3 Feb,
Paris
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