|
PLEASE
REPOST WIDELY.
MEDIA ALERT
For Immediate Release
Attention: News Assignment
Media Contacts:
Andy Thayer 773-209-1187
Chris Geovanis 312-446-4939
HEADLINE: Police Threaten to Ban Peace Activists’ Press Conference
SUBHEAD: Protesters to Police: We Will Be at Oak Street speaking
to the press and the public.
CHICAGO: Late Thursday afternoon, Chicago Alderman Joe Moore told
peace activists that a Chicago police commander told Moore that
protesters were not allowed to hold a press conference or an informational
rally at Oak and Michigan to advise people that they could face
arrest for exercising their constitutional rights to oppose the
war at that location. The same commander called the protesters’
attorney on Thursday, asking what protesters’ plans were for
Oak and Michigan.
Organizers have vowed to gather at Oak and Michigan and stage a
press conference anyway; speakers will include a former marine and
civil rights movement veteran who did jail time with Martin Luther
King in 1962 who will advise people that Chicago Mayor Richard Daley
has abolished free speech in the Gold Coast. Peace activists are
urging those able to go to Michigan and Oak on Saturday to distribute
flyers outlining the City’s hostility to constitutional rights,
and that directs people to a permitted 2PM anti-war rally at Adams
and Dearborn. The March 19 Coalition, which has been endorsed by
more than 50 organizations, has pledged to take their opposition
to the war directly to the people, arguing that free speech without
an audience is meaningless in rejecting City efforts to drive peace
activists to the empty corridors of Clark Street.
"If we don’t fight for our rights, we won’t have
any," said Chris Geovanis, a volunteer for the activists. "We’re
bitterly disappointed that Daley and the police have turned what
should be a dialogue about the evils of this war into a battle for
civil liberties. The police threat to forbid us from speaking to
the media on Oak Street assaults our most precious rights, from
freedom of the press to freedom of speech, and we plan to tell people
at Oak and Michigan that people risk arrest for trying to exercise
their constitutional rights -- and that this war is wrong and we
are united in our opposition to it."
Chicago mayor Richard Daley and the City can still reverse their
position to criminalize the effort to get out information about
the costs of the war, estimated to top $2.1 billion for Chicago
taxpayers alone and more than $11 billion for Illinois residents.
Protesters argue that Daley’s actions effectively allow the
City to declare any area a ‘no free speech zone,’ determine
when and where people can exercise their constitutional rights to
free speech and public assembly, and stake Chicago to a policy of
outlawing free speech at a time when the U.S. government is celebrating
similar public expressions in cities from Kiev to Beirut.
This week, the Chicago police posted a notice to their website,
"ATTENTION SATURDAY MARCH 19 DEMONSTRATION PARTICIPANTS,"
telling protesters to assemble not at noon but one hour earlier
instead at BugHouse Square -- a location for which protesters also
do not have a permit -- and saying that people at Oak and Michigan
could face arrest. Similar free speech battles are being waged across
the country. On Thursday, the Center For Constitutional Rights sued
the City of New York for refusing to allow protesters to march along
5th Ave. to oppose the war, a battle that closely mirrors the permit
fight in Chicago. In Los Angeles, the City tried to rescind a permit
for an antiwar demonstration, then backed down when the antiwar
coalition and their lawyers vowed to protest anyway. Chicago protesters
are recommending that the mayor and police follow LA’s lead
"With support for the war rapidly eroding, pro-war politicians
around the country are increasingly tempted to shore up support
for it by squelching or marginalizing anti-war voices," said
Andy Thayer, who has been heading up the permit battle for the protesters.
"As we saw in the Vietnam war, an unjust war abroad breeds
suppression of civil liberties and rights at home."
|