Stockwell Tube Peace Vigil, Tonight Monday 6pm
stwc | 25.07.2005 15:33 | Anti-militarism | Anti-racism | London
Following the death of Jean Charles de Menezes on Friday 22nd July Lambeth Stop the War Coalition have called a Peace and Solidarity Vigil at Stockwell tube station at 6pm tonight, Monday 25th July. All sections of the community are invited and strongly encouraged to attend.
John Rees, Stop the War Coalition, said "however horrific the bombings in London on 7th July and however important it is to secure the safety of the public, 'there can be no excuse for the police adopting a shoot to kill policy which guns down innocent people in cold blood. This is precisely the crime for which we hold the terrorists responsible. The police in a democratic society have a duty to act with higher standards. They should be trying to diminish the climate of fear, not add to it."
stwc
Homepage:
http://www.stopwar.org.uk/documents/stockwellvigil.pdf
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
A tasteless PR exercise
25.07.2005 18:15
This was as unfortuate event but in light of our societies current postion it would appear inevitable that mistakes will happen, to promote the idea that the uk police are an unregulated organisation is so utterly absurd that it places shame on the global nature of this organisation
Please show some respect for the dead and ignore this ugly PR exercise.
Kelly Holmes
kelly holmes
Vigil
25.07.2005 18:51
J
Thanks for the vigil
25.07.2005 20:05
Terror attacks, wars and state repression conspire to crush us and our liberties. But we will not slide into a state of totaltarian oppression in silence!
You might succumb, but I am glad that many others will carry on building the struggle for peace, equality and freedom.
And I think we must be honest and recognise that the continual right-wing trolls trying to undermine any questioning of state terror that have appeared on Indymedia recently are multiple identities coming from far fewer sources, (if you get my gist!)
A young Brazillian is a suicide bomber, Iraq threatens us with weapons of mass destruction - we must reject this political practice of pre-emptive strikes based upon 'state intelligence' (ie. lies, paranoia and violence!)
We held vigils in solidarity with the victims of the 7/7 terror in London.
We hold vigils in solidarity with the victims of the US/UK terror in Iraq.
And we will hold vigils in solidarity with this victim of police / state terror as well.
We will not be silenced!
bk
Predictable equation
25.07.2005 20:06
Alec
to kelly holmes
25.07.2005 20:28
Are you saying that only the dead from the bombing deserve respect? Jean Charles de Menezes is also dead. No respect for him???
"Mistakes will happen." The Convenient Passive-Voice God strikes again!!!!!! How about, "The police made a mistake"?
A "mistake," by definition, is something that should not have been done, and something that should be avoided in the future. As long as Ian Blair is saying that everything was done right and nothing should be changed, then it bloody well wasn't a Mistake. It was a Correct Action! It was Right! It was Proper! It was Great! Death to Jean Charles, the bugger deserved it!!!! And so does anyone else who wears a heavy coat, has dark hair, walks out of a "suspicious" building, and instinctively runs when he sees people chasing him!!!!
For that matter, death to you and me if we ever do that, because we deserve it!!!!! That's right, death is a fitting punishment for anyone wearing a heavy jacket, with dark hair, who walks out of a "suspicious" building, and instinctively runs when he sees people chasing him. It just hasn't been written into the Criminal Code yet, that's all.
Do you, perhaps, think I am being unfair to your point of view? I submit that the above is the logical conclusion of your views.
I think it is a very reasonable request to ask that the police release the security tapes of what happened. They may show that the pursuit was not as clear-cut as the police say it was. (Remember, they also said at first that Jean Charles was definitely linked to the terrorists.) Whatever the case, it is unacceptable in human rights terms to kill someone on mere suspicion, and badly founded suspicion at that.
I think, Kelly Holmes, that you need to take an empathy pill. Perhaps you would not be denouncing the vigil for Jean Charles de Menezes if it were you or a loved one of yours. Tragedy is tragedy, whether one dies by a bomb or a bullet in either London or Iraq. Your hypocritical insistence on "respect for the dead" is very disrespectful to at least one innocent dead person. Spare us your phony self-righteousness, will you?
activism - los angeles
Stop the bandwagon, I want to get off
26.07.2005 08:19
Human Doing