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InPDUM Condemns brutal U.S. Attacks on Haitian people, Holds Demonstrations throughout the united states. - InPDUM

Stop the Deportations! 

The International People’s Democratic Uhuru Movement (InPDUM) stands in unwavering solidarity with our brothers and sisters of Haiti and condemns the brutal attacks being put on them by the u.s. at the Texas border. In response to these attacks, mobilizing demonstrations were held by our San Diego, Chicago, St. Louis, Boston and Philadelphia branches condemning the actions of the u.s, providing our communities with an African internationalist analysis of the situation and upholding the revolutionary history of the Africans of Ayiti.

St. Louis Condemns u.s. Brutality. Haiti Editor of The Burning Spear Speaks out

Led by our international President, Kalambayi Andenet, St. Louis comrades staged a mobilizing press conference featuring statements from InPDUM, the African People’s Socialist Party (APSP), the Uhuru Solidarity Movement (USM) and local organizers from the St. Louis Haitian community. Elikya Ngoma, member of the African People’s Socialist Party and  Haiti Editor of The Burning Spear Newspaper gave a  breakdown of the situation in Haiti and the Texas border. She explained that no honest explanation of the situation can be given without including the u.s.’s parasitic relationship with Haiti.  “When you talk about the question of why theres an influx so many Africans from Haiti in the united states, you have to talk about the question of u.s. Colonialism in Haiti and the u.s.’s presence in Haiti which is only there to keep our people in a state of oppression, to install neocolonial presidents and government agencies which do not work in the interest of the people, that continue to steal our wealth and resources and continue to keep us tied to these colonial enslavers- the united states”. She went on to explain that since Haiti’s resources are being sucked dry by the u.s. we have to look at Haitians entering the united states as merely chasing their own resources- attempting to gain access to the resources that have been stolen from them. 

Boston Opens Demonstration with Haitian National Anthem  

Comrades in Boston began their demonstration with a thundering rendition of the Haitian National Anthem, performed in Haitian Creole by InPDUM Boston member and cultural worker Thamanai Justine. This anthem, which celebrates the revolutionary history of Africans in Haiti, was performed by the comrade with such fury that her voice was said to have echoed off of the immigration office and its surrounding buildings. “We are having this demonstration right in front of the immigration offices because these are the people who believe that they can determine who can enter the country and who cannot” began comrade Dexter Mlimwegu. “But a country that established itself through the genocide of the indigenous people of this land and the enslavement of African people has no right to say who can be here and who can’t be here- THEY are the ones who can’t be here. White people are the only illegal immigrants in this conversation”.

Chicago Educates African Youth  

Chicago members of InPDUM held a dynamic press conference. They delivered a statement in solidarity with the people of Haiti and read the opening statements from InPDUM’s African Charge Genocide Petition charging the u.s. Government with the crime of genocide against African people. At one point, an African man, drawn by the red, black and green flag waving at their demonstration, approached the comrades with his son and asked about the meaning of the flag as well as an explanation of the events at the Texas border. The father told the comrades that he wanted his son to get a “firsthand” analysis of the situation from a member of InPDUM. InPDUM Chicago immediately followed their demonstration with a Burning Spear Newspaper Study Session open to all in the African community to attend.

San Diego looks at Haitian Revolution as an example for indigenous struggles to follow

InPDUM Vice-President Matsemela Odom led our San Diego demonstration. He emphasized the 1803 Revolution of Haiti which dealt a near death blow to Spain, France, Britain and the entire system of colonial-capitalism. “We know that whats happening at the false colonial borders is another act of genocide- a 200 year counterinsurgency against the African worker’s revolution of Ayiti, the first worker’s revolution to topple colonial slavery and we refuse to remove it from that context”. 

Profound statements of solidarity were also given by comrades from Umoja, the Party for Socialism and Liberation and Union del Barrio. Under-Secretary of Union del Barrio, Benjamin Prado, “we unite with the call of InPDUM to charge the united states with genocide. We, as a mexican organization, recognize that we are on our stolen land as indigenous mexican people and that california, arizona, nevada, texas, and colorado are all stolen land that came as a consequence of u.s. Settler colonialism”. Comrade Benjamin continued “… we recognize that Haiti was the first liberated land of the America’s, when the slave rose up against the slave master and kicked him out. We salute the people of Haiti and the brave African people who provided the example of what it means to struggle and liberate your lands from the oppression of colonialism. Because of that example, today we [Mexican people]celebrate 200 years of resistance to colonialism because Mexico kicked Spain’s ass and liberated our own land”. The San Diego demonstration then marched  to the local ICE prison where many colonized people are held captive and showed their solidarity with our brothers and sisters locked behind the walls.

The u.s. Attacks on Haitian people is Genocide. Build the Africans Charge Genocide campaign!

We understand that the inhumane treatment of haitian people at the border  is nothing but a day in the lives of a colonized people. This is not new, this is colonialism, and we understand the ongoing intensifying attacks made on our people as nothing short of genocide. According to the criteria of genocide put forward by the United Nations themselves at the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide Assembly on 9 December 1948, genocide means any of the following acts committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: 

  • (a) Killing members of the group;
  • (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
  • (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
  • (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
  • (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group;

By the Untited Nations’ own colonial definition, we deem the u.s. Government guilty of the genocide of african people and InPDUM  will not stop until the u.s. Government answers for its crimes against African people and humanity as a whole.

You can  join the struggle today by becoming a member of InPDUM at inpdum.org.

We also call on you to join the Africans Charge Genocide campaign and help us bring this fight right to the United Nations. Sign our petition charging the U.S. with the genocide of African people at africanschargegenocide.org. 

We demand that the u.s. stop the deportations

We demand reparations to Haiti and all African people.

And we demand freedom in our lifetime. Uhuru!

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