Prisoners across the country say
they are gearing up for an end-of-summer nationwide strike against
inhumane living conditions and unpaid labor—or, in their words,
“modern-day slavery.”
The strike was announced in an
April 24 press
release and shared by a number of advocacy groups. According
to one of the outside organizers who was contacted by In
These Times, the press
released was developed and written by prisoners. The strike, which is
primarily being organized by the prisoners, will start on August 21
and last until September 9.
The action will involve work
stoppages, sit-ins and a boycott of purchases from prison stores. The
prisoners are demanding improved living conditions and an end to
unpaid labor, as well as progressive sentencing reform and access to
rehabilitation programs.
Organizers say they derived their
boycott tactics from the Redistribute the Pain campaign, a plan put
forward by the prisoners’ rights group Free
Alabama Movement earlier this year. That campaign declares
that “our goal is to remove the assets and monetary gain from those
who practice slavery, especially those in the U.S. and their allies.”
“It is time that we take a new
look and what is taking place across our nation in our prisons,”
reads the April 24 statement from prisoners. “Not only is it
important for us to take a look, but we must also take in
consideration that for years we have neglected what is actually
taking place.”
The strike comes in response to a
riot that broke out at Lee Correctional Institution in Lee County,
South Carolina on April 15. Seven prisoners were killed and 17 were
seriously injured in an incident allegedly sparked by a gang rivalry
within the prison. It is the deadliest U.S. prison riot in 25 years.
Prison authorities say they didn’t send guards to intervene until
they had assembled enough officers to do it safely. This
took more than four hours. Prison killings have reached a
critical mass in South Carolina, as they’ve quadrupled from 2015 to
2017.
South Carolina activist Malcolm
Harris, one of the organizers outside of prisons helping to
coordinate the upcoming strike, told In
These Times that the
violence in South Carolina is “reflective of what’s going on in
the rest of the nation.” Nineteen percent of male
prisoners in the United States say they’ve been assaulted
by other prisoners, and 21 percent of them say they’ve been
assaulted by prison guards. Women only make up 7 percent of the total
prison population, but 33 percent of prisoners who are sexually
victimized by prison staff members are women.
South Carolina corrections
department director Bryan Stirling claims he’s identified the
specific cause of the riot: cell phones. “Our preliminary
investigation has found that this is gangs fighting over
territory,” declared Stirling
shortly after the riot. “And if they’re incarcerated, then
they’re going to have to have a cellphone to continue their
criminal ways from behind bars.”
Many have pushed
back on this analysis, pointing out that without cell
phones, the grisly details of South Carolina’s riot wouldn’t be
known to the public. Critics also mention that South Carolina’s
Department of Corrections has been pushing for the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) to allow authorities to use cell
phone jammers for years. This effort is taking place nationwide: In
2016, 10 GOP governors wrote a letter to
FCC Chairman Thomas Wheeler asking the agency to grant states the
“flexibility and authority” to stop communication within prisons.
One of the lawmakers who signed the letter is former South Carolina
Governor Nikki Haley, current United States Ambassador to the United
Nations.
Critics of mass incarceration
attribute incidents like the South Carolina riot to the overall
conditions of our punitive justice system, like the eradication of
incentive programs for prisoners. "They've steadily cut back
what little programs they had, and they're just warehousing people in
understaffed, overcrowded prisons," Paul Wright, the director of
the Human Rights Defense Center, a nonprofit that advocates on behalf
of people in detention, told CBS.
According to Wright, "Prison and penal operations have been
studied pretty extensively for the last 15 years. When you take away
all hope and you take away any reason for [prisoners] to behave
themselves, then that's when you start having higher levels of
violence, assaults, and attacks.”
Harris echoed Wright’s
sentiments. “All these things we’re fighting against with the
strike, they’ve exacerbated everything in the prisons and they’ve
bred violent reactions,” he said. He also pushed back on the
narrative that more guards would necessarily mean less violence.
“There’s always going to be more prisoners than guards,” he
said. “More guards are not going to stop the problem.”
Isaac Bailey, whose brother is
imprisoned at Lee, wrote an editorial for
the The Charlotte
Observer on April
18th summarizing what he had heard about the riot from his brother.
According to Bailey, the actions of prison authorities helped
facilitate the gang violence. “Prisoners knew officers would not
come to the rescue if they were attacked—which provided a major
incentive to join gangs as a means of self-preservation,” wrote
Bailey. “After every incident, prisoners are locked down longer,
which leads to more resentment and unrest and more violence, a
vicious cycle.”
This strike is slated to follow
similar collective actions throughout the country’s prison system.
Last December, 45 prisoners in Iowa Park, Texas began a hunger
strike. The following month, prisoners in eight Florida prisons
initiated a work stoppage to protest against unpaid wages and
inhumane living conditions. Many claim that they
faced retaliation for
their efforts, with some allegedly sent to solitary confinement for
participating. That same month, 45 prisoners in Iowa Park, Texas
began a hunger strike. This past Easter, roughly 1,000 prisoners at
Washington State Penitentiary participated in
a hunger strike to protest the quality of their food. A couple weeks
later, prisoners in Huntsville, Texas went on a hunger
strike in response to an imposed lockdown in their prison.
It’s unclear how many prisons
throughout the country will end up participating in the action, but
the organizers are calling on individuals to “spread the strike and
word of the strike in every place of detention.”
>> The article above was written by Michael Arria, and is reprinted from In These Times.
No comments:
Post a Comment