| Police Beat and Arrest Elderly Man in Chinatown |
|
|
|
**CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities is a member organization of Peoples' Justice. This is their statement about a recent bloody arrest in Chinatown. PJ is helping them organize a know your rights training on May 22nd (details below.) CAAAV Statement on Police Violence in Columbus ParkOn Mother’s Day last Sunday, Yi Zhuo Wu, a Chinese immigrant, was pinned down by four NYPD police officers who beat him bloody and then handcuffed him in Chinatown’s Columbus Park. Wu, a musician, is a member of the Street Musical Club, a group that has played music regularly in Columbus Park for more than four years. Aggravating the situation even further, as the community was watching Mr. Wu being arrested and calling for him to be released, a police officer threatened to mace people who did not move back. According to the police, the Street Musical Club did not have a sound permit. In a statement to reporters, the NYPD has characterized this as a misunderstanding, that this would not have happened if people in the community knew that they needed a sound permit to play instruments in the park. Their solution is to hold a community information session to let people know what procedures they should follow. Who do the police think they’re fooling? In 2009, Chinatown resident and immigrant Jian Zhong Chen was in the Bronx when someone tried to rob him. When the police came, they did not try to get his side of the story – instead he was thrown in jail and charged for a crime he did notcommit. It is a common sentiment in Chinatown that the police are not there to protect everyone. They protect rich people, and they protect property. Undocumented immigrants are particularly vulnerable, as they feel they cannot go to the police even if their lives are in danger, fearing that they will be turned over to ICE. But those who do not speak English, who are poor or low-income, know that there is no guarantee that their rights will be protected when the NYPD is involved. In Mr.Wu’s case, it is easy to dismiss this as a “one-time” instance that a community information session can address and fix. But the root of the problem is not that people don’t know what it takes to play instruments in the park. The reality is that the NYPD operates and has gotten by on fear and intimidation. And the reality is that as Chinatown increasingly becomes a neighborhood for non-immigrants and wealthier New Yorkers, Chinese immigrants are less and less welcome. The police have, in fact, become a force that helps to push immigrants out of the neighborhood, either by making us feel unwelcome or by, as in this case, using force. Police violence is not justifiable in any situation. Here isthe youtube link to the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5RHmd1-ZHyQ Doyou know what your rights are? CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities is a city-wide organization that has a history of working with groups in New York City around police accountability issues. The Chinatown Tenants Union is a project of CAAAV. Come to our office on Sunday, May 22nd for a community Know Your Rights training. Sunday, May 22, 2011 1-4pm 46 Hester Street, Storefront New York, NY 10002 If you have questions, contact us at (212) 473-6485 or email us at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
. |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|


