January 24, 2013
Providence, R.I. — Led by youth organizers from the Cambodian
community in Providence, R.I., more than 200 protesters rallied and held
a spirited night march on Jan. 17 to protest a violent police raid that
brutalized a 77-year-old Cambodian woman and her 13-year-old grandson
in their home.
During the Jan. 8 raid in the West End neighborhood, one woman was
dragged from her bathroom, mocked and videotaped by Providence police.
The youth was dragged out of bed. Everyone in the home was handcuffed
and held at gunpoint.
Marchers chanted, “No, no, PPD [Providence Police Department]; stop
police brutality!” as they moved up Hanover Street in the direction of
the PPD Headquarters. The entire organization and security for the march
were provided by youth leaders from the Cambodian community and by
PrYSM (Providence Youth Student Movement), with support from the
Providence People’s Assembly and other solidarity leaders.
In just a few days following the raid, the community gathered 1,000
signatures on a petition demanding that the charges against members of
the family be dropped and an apology issued to the family. The
unprecedented community fightback followed years of police harassment,
deportations and racial profiling of Cambodian youth, many of whom are
entered into a police “gang database.”
The march ended in a rally at PPD Headquarters. PrYSM organizer Yin
Lam, 14, told the crowd: “The police harass us. Is it the way we look,
our color! People feel like they are being followed. My aunt,
grandmother and cousin were raided! We will not accept this!”
PrYSM, which has been carrying on a 10-year struggle against the
Providence police, states on its website: “Our primary aim is to fight
for social justice in the Southeast Asian community, but it is under the
context and challenge of rampant systemic violence that often paralyzes
the community. One form of violence in the community is state violence and the criminalization of Southeast Asian youth.” (prysm.us)
The organization defines criminalization as “a term that embodies the
collective and collateral effect of failing social welfare institutions
(such as education, where some Providence high schools have a 50
percent dropout rate) and increasingly harsh and punitive law
enforcement practices (such as mandatory minimums and mandatory
deportations). Many of our youth are faced with racial profiling in
schools, on the streets, and in shopping centers on a daily basis. The
majority of our membership have brothers, sisters, and parents who are
incarcerated, deported or facing deportation, or who have been victims
of police brutality.”
Organizers vowed to carry on the fight to end police raids, racial profiling and deportations.
Mary Kay Harris and Bill Bateman contributed to this article.
2 comments:
Smart way to go. We need to get used to doing that more when we feel injustice done to our community or even one of us. Proud of these young Cambodian Americans.
We are very proud of you Providence Cambodian Community Group! Stand up for your rights and protect the members of your community. The bible says if you continue not to stand up for your suffering and rights the stone will cry out. So good job. "This land is your land, this land is my land...This land is made for you and me." God bless America, and God bless the Cambodian Americans living in Providence, Rhode Island.
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