Justice for Chris Kaba ! : 無料・フリー素材/写真
Justice for Chris Kaba ! / alisdare1
ライセンス | クリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-継承 2.1 |
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説明 | Join the 57,000+ people who (as of the morning of 19.09) have already signed the petition to demand #JusticeForChrisKabawww.change.org/p/demand-justice-for-chris-kabaOn Saturday 17 September, hundreds of people gathered outside New Scotland Yard in central London to protest the fatal shooting of a 24-year-old black man in his car, by an armed police officer twelve days earlier at Streatham Hill in South London. There was no gun found either in the vehicle or anywhere nearby. Several of the protesters I spoke to, maintained that the young man and expectant father wouldn't have been shot dead had he not been black. Neither could they understand how Chris Kaba could have posed any possible immediate threat to life to justify the use of lethal force. Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Labour MP for Streatham, told the crowd that 'When Chris Kaba was shot and killed, the narrative we heard from the media was that he was a drill artist, that he was a rapper, that he had been to prison before. Look at him. He's clearly a criminal.... almost as if to say that because of any of that and because he was a black man, he may have deserved what happened to him. That is a really popular narrative. When people get up and shout "Black lives matter" and people shout "Don't be ridiculous - all lives matter," there's a clear reason why they are doing it, because in popular narrative black lives don't, if they did people wouldn't be giving justifications for Chris to die in that way; nobody deserves to die in that way, let's be absolutely clear.' Shortly afterwards, Jeremy Corbyn spoke and was critical of the police response. "We are here today to mourn his (Chris Kaba's) death, mourn his passing, to remember his life, but also to show that we will never allow him to be forgotten. We will never allow the victims of this kind of violence on either side of the Atlantic ever to be forgotten. We cannot have a situation where somebody is shot dead through the windscreen of a car and the officer concerned is not immediately suspended from the police force, not from duty, from the police force. And as Bell (the MP) and others have pointed out, in any other job or profession or walk of life, if someone dies as a result of possibly your action you get suspended. If you are a train driver, a bus driver or a delivery driver involved in a terrible accident, you need to be suspended so that enquiries can take place. And so, I absolutely support the demands made by the family." Some of those present at the protest had seen their family members either shot by the police or die in police custody. Among them was Lee Lawrence. In September 1985, when he was only eleven years old, his mother, Cherry Groce, had been paralysed from the chest down after being shot by a police officer inside their home, after she got up from her bed to investigate the noise caused by an early morning raid by officers who were looking for Lawrence's older brother Michael. His mother died in 2011, the year when Mark Duggan was shot dead in Tottenham sparking widespread civil unrest. www.theguardian.com/books/2020/sep/05/the-man-who-shot-my..."We never got justice," Larwrence told the crowd. "Justice is about fairness and if we received justice my mother would not have been killed. We will hold their legacy and their deaths will stand for something. We owe it to them to never give up."socialistworker.co.uk/news/protesters-demand-justice-for-... |
撮影日 | 2022-09-17 13:04:39 |
撮影者 | alisdare1 , Woolwich, United Kingdom |
タグ | |
撮影地 | Westminster, England, UK 地図 |
カメラ | ILCE-7RM4 , SONY |
露出 | 0.003 sec (1/320) |
開放F値 | f/2.8 |
焦点距離 | 24 mm |