Under the banner of “One People! One Party! One Destiny!” the Congress will be convened by African Socialist International Chairman Omali Yeshitela, a veteran of the African liberation struggle. Yeshitela issues a call to black communities to get organized. “The worldwide economic and political crises we are witnessing today present a great opportunity for black people everywhere to take back the power to control our own destiny as a people. African workers must organize ourselves into our own independent organization and prepare to govern.”
Also present will be APSP-USA member Diop Olugbala who got worldwide media coverage when he represented the Party in publicly challenging Barack Obama during a campaign event in St. Petersburg, FL in 2008. Olugbala demanded to know why the then-presidential candidate would not denounce police violence and economic exploitation in African communities of the U.S., leading a chant, “what about the black community, Obama?”.
A broad spectrum of black leaders will address the Congress, including Malik Zulu Shabazz, Founder of Black Lawyers for Justice and Chairman of the New Black Panther Party; Jackson, Mississippi City Councilperson Chokwe Lumumba, Chairman of the New Afrikan People’s Organization; Glen Ford, Executive Editor of Black Agenda Report, which has published scathing critiques of Obama’s policies; Efia Nwangaza, veteran of SNCC’s Atlanta Project, broadcaster, leader of the Malcolm X Grassroots Center for Self-Determination in South Carolina, and member of the Black is Back Coalition that held the first black-led protest in D.C. opposing the Obama regime’s war policies; Alex Morley, attorney and workers’ rights expert from the Bahamas; Nellie Bailey, leader of the Harlem Tenant’s Council; MOVE Family member Pam Africa, leader of the campaign to free Mumia Abu Jamal; Lawrence Hamm, Chairman of New Jersey’s People’s Organization for Progress; and Queen Mother Dorothy Lewis, a lifelong fighter for reparations to African people.
International allies of the black freedom struggle will also be present at the Congress, including Marcos Garcia, the Labor Attache of the Venezuelan Embassy; Ernesto Bustillos of Union del Barrio, a Chicano-Mexicano rights organization in southern California; and a representative of the Nicaraguan Embassy.
The Congress will take place at the Kellogg Center, located at 800 Florida Ave. NE on the Gallaudet University Campus in Washington, D.C. and is open to the public. For more information or to register, visit apspcongress.org or call 727-821-6620.
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Blacks back Obama
26.06.2010 09:03
Obama promised nothing to African-Americans during his election campaign and they backed him largely because his team had to win African-American Democrat votes from Hiliary Clinton during the Primaries, and a lot of black celebrities supported him. Most African-Americans know very little about his Foundation/Wall Street funded background. The liklihood is that his mother was a CIA agent and his real father was a black American. If African-Americans were given proof of this, they still wouldn't want to believe it. When he was elected, African-American were optimistic about their future even when most indicators showed their lives were getting worse.
But now African-Americans and Hispanics are the bedrock of his support. There could have been a thorough-going attack on affirmative action. That didn't happen because he can't afford to alienate the black vote too much.
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