HAS RIVERFRONT PARK BEEN SAVED FOR PUBLIC USE? NOT YET, BUT PERHAPS

  • FRIENDS OF RIVERFRONT PARK
    On July 2, the city of Peoria terminated the development agreement to build apartments in Riverfront Park.
    Friends of Riverfront Park (FORP) thanks all who helped get to this point to save the park for public green space. The city of Peoria has posted the notice of termination on its website at
    http://www.peoriagov.org/content/uploads/2015/11/Rivertrailtermination_1531158130_add.pdf
    But concerns remain:
    1. The City’s application to the National Park Service (NPS) to sell the parkland for apartments must be withdrawn. We ask supporters to contact their council representatives and city manager asking them to immediately withdraw the application. Withdrawal places the parkland under the protection of federal regulations and continues its use as a public park.
    2. FORP’s research found deficiencies in a prior land conversion of Southtown to Rocky Glen, completed in 2012. The National Park Service (NPS) agreed, and determined that the city has a likely shortfall in fair market value of the converted land. The city has stated that it will “work with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and the National Park Service to resolve the issues related to the Rocky Glen conversion, in order to close out any outstanding issues with the Land and Water Grant,”
    http://www.peoriagov.org/content/uploads/2015/11/River-TrailUpdate6.29-July-6_1531158088_add.pdf
    The city therefore needs new appraisals for these properties to determine their fair market value.
    The city SHOULD NOT PURCHASE additional land to correct an anticipated fair market value deficit until the appraisals are completed and accepted by NPS showing a deficit.
    Despite its extreme fiscal crisis, the city is proposing purchase of park replacement land that may cost more than its appraised value, creating excess fair market value. FORP does not want a set up for a future Riverfront Park conversion for development. The land purchase is likely to be on the council agenda for July 24.
    Ask council members to reject the proposed purchase and look for other solutions, such as properties the city already owns in Southtown, which could be made into pocket parks. A public decision process also should be in place before replacement land is purchased. – 30 –
    More information: email peoriaforp@yahoo.com
    Karrie Alms, 309-258-7762
    * * *

Peoria Rally for Immigration Rights

Despite brutally hot temperatures, about 300 people attended a rally Saturday in downtown Peoria to protest President Donald Trump’s immigration policies and demand America honor the human rights of people seeking asylum –– a basic human right established by the United Nations. The Rev. Marvin Hightower, president of Peoria NAACP, urged everyone to not only vote but to encourage and assist others in the voting process. 

Guest Opinion: If only they’d come the right way….

BY ZACHARY GITTRICH

A common refrain among the anti-immigrant crowd is “Well, if only they’d come the right way, they wouldn’t have these problems,” referring to the threat of deportation/removal by Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE). As if this absolves the Federal government of kidnapping children from their parents.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions has stated immigrants, documented or not, will be detained for deportation on the mere suspicion of a crime. Not convicted–not innocent until proven guilty; merely suspected of a crime. Nor has ICE wasted any time enforcing such a policy.
In Los Angeles, Jose Luis Garcia, a law-abiding legal permanent resident whose lived for 50 years in America legally was detained by ICE for deportation. Their reasoning: 20 years ago he was involved in a domestic incident. Apparently, it was irrelevant that he had served his sentence and had not committed any crimes since. In Cincinnati, a 22-year old mother of two who has legal status, was detained when she went to an ICE facility to bail out an inmate. In February, 7 people were detained when they went to federal buildings for the express purpose of fixing their status; they were there trying to “come the right way.”
One of the most common objections to a welcoming ordinance is that it promotes undocumented immigration–it’s unfair to legal immigrants. This was an objection of Councilwoman Akeson’s. She knows several immigrants that “came the right way,” they work for her, and over time she’s built a good working relationship with them (and she pays them very well, according to her).
They believe it’s unfair to help the undocumented when they had to do it “right,” and for this reason the councilwoman opposes an ordinance. But with the recent actions by this administration what would happen if these friends of Councilwoman Akeson’s were working at her house and ICE bursts through her gates with the intention of arresting someone who had recently been arrested for a petty offense– disorderly conduct–not convicted, just arrested. Would the councilwoman run out of her house, imploring ICE to halt their activities because her friend has legal status, he has due process rights that should not be infringed upon? And if they detained this friend of hers anyway, would the councilwoman rush to their aid procuring them an attorney to help them get bail while they await their court date in order to continue working? Certainly, even the councilwoman would view this as an injustice perpetrated by an overbearing government?
But if they’d only come the right way.
On Flag Day, our resident servant-leader, Councilman Oyler (who also opposes a Welcoming Ordinance), displayed a Gadsden Flag at City Council– the “Don’t Tread On Me” flag. A classic image of Americana, dating back to the War for Independence, symbolizing the people’s struggle against tyrannical government that doesn’t respect civil rights like due process of law, right to an attorney, freedom of expression and freedom of religion. Since 2012, nearly 2,000 American citizens–not undocumented, not legal-permanent residents–citizens were detained by ICE, some for up to three
years. Three years… that’s a lot of years. If that is not the definition of a government treading I don’t know what is. Why would anyone–citizen or immigrant–trust going to the police if a simple mistake in their name being recorded in a Database could lead to being unjustly detained in blatant violations of their rights to due process? Aren’t relationships between the community and police strained enough already? Why would any elected official who believes in loving thy neighbor and inalienable god-given
civil rights want their police affiliated with a big government agency committing such unlawful acts?
But if only they’d come the right way.
I’m sorry to tell you, but the current administration doesn’t care about the right way. And, it is for this reason that a Welcoming Ordinance for Peoria is so imperative.

Fly-in and Pancake Breakfast Saturday

The grass landing strip at the Havana Regional Airport will be a busy one on Saturday, June 23 when the local flying club hosts their 12th annual Fly In and Pancake Breakfast. The airport is just six miles south of Havana on Route 97,

The public is invited to come and enjoy a breakfast of pancakes and sausages and to come see the display of aircraft that have been invited to be part of the day.

Among them will be the St. John’s Saint’s Flight helicopter.

Just for the kids there will be a junior flight simulator, and for the scientifically minded there will be a cutaway motor to inspect.

An aerobatic homebuilt RV-4 was among the special visiting aircraft last year and is expected to return again this year.

In addition to airplanes, visitors will also enjoy an encampment of World War II re-enactors.

Visitors will see a wide variety of aircraft take off and land, ranging from big Air Tractors that provide aerial spraying to the smallest home-built gyrocopters.

The event is scheduled for 7 a.m. to 1 p.m., and pancakes and sausages will be served from 7 to 10:30 a.m.

Commercial-rated pilots will be offering rides for a fee and will provide their passengers with a bird’s-eye view of the area for those interested in a ride that day.

The airport is located about six miles south of Havana, just off Route 97. Watch for signs.

The event is hosted by the local EAA Chapter 1420, which has named the event in honor of one of their members, the late Harvey Tapscott.

African-American Community Reacts in Shock to Police Valor Awards

 

The Rev. Marvin Hightower, president of the Peoria NAACP, answers questions during a press conference Friday expressing disappointment over police commendations of valor given to six officers involved in the shooting death of Eddie Russell Jr.

BY CLARE HOWARD
Words were not hurled in anger or indignation. They were employed with cutting precision. And shock. There was clearly stunned disbelief and a sense of betrayal.
Representatives of Peoria’s African-American community expressed pain, fear, frustration and resolution at a press conference Friday afternoon at the NAACP offices regarding commendation of valor awards given to six police officers involved in the shooting death of Eddie Russell Jr. in Peoria on Sept. 20, 2017.
How is that valor, how is that bravery when six police officers shoot and kill an African-American man with a known history of mental health issues after a prolonged standoff, asked Don Jackson, attorney and past president of the Peoria and Illinois NAACP.
“It is absolutely outrageous these officers are being given an award,” he said. “Six of them shooting one man, and that’s bravery? What were these decision makers thinking?”
He said this kind of thinking proves all African Americans, especially young men, are in jeopardy of being shot by police.
The Rev. Marvin Hightower, current president of the Peoria NAACP, said he is “disgusted and upset” these officers received this award.
“I am a pastor, and I have a moral obligation to stand up for what’s right” he said, noting that interim Peoria Police Chief Loren Marion referred to the death of a police colleague as equivalent to a death of a family member. Hightower said Russell’s death was like the death of a family member to Peoria’s entire African-American community.
Following the police shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., Hightower and other members of the Peoria African-American community met with then police chief Jerry Mitchell and expressed concern that kind of shooting not happen here.
“We are not immune to that. We are one bad decision away from that. And September 20 that came to pass,” he said. “OK, he (Eddie Russell Jr.) was on camera robbing a bank, but it was well known he had mental health issues, and we believe something else could have been done. But he was shot 17 or 18 times. These police officers should not get commendations. That is a slap in the face to the African-American community.”
Eddie Russell Sr. said the commendations awarded to the officers were “a slap in the face felt real hard.”
He recalled being at the scene of the standoff and telling chief Marion, “I need to find my son before you kill him.”
He noted that one of those police officers was also involved in the shooting death of Daniel El after a traffic stop.
“Daniel El did not need to die,” he said. “How can a traffic stop turn into a killing.”
Sherry Cannon, with the Elite program, said she feels frightened for the safety of black children. She urged people to contact legislators to demand that more be done to prevent this.
Hightower said the way forward is to focus on policy issues designed to change the culture.
“This is egregious and immoral and should not happen again,” he said, noting Peoria needs to become more involved in a statement of 10 shared principles formulated by the Illinois NAACP and the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police. The document is designed to bridge the gap of mistrust between police and the black community.
Bartonville police chief Brian Fengel is president of the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police and was involved in crafting the document of shared values. Also involved was Peoria Park District police chief Sylvester Bush.
The Bartonville police department is the first in central Illinois to adopt the principles of shared valued.
In response to a request for comment, Peoria Police Chief Loren Marion said, “The NAACP has a right to express their opinion.”

League of Women Voters: Welcoming Cities

The League of Women Voters of Greater Peoria will discuss welcoming cities at its Drinks and Dialogue event 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 16 at the Lariat Steakhouse, 2232 West Glen Ave. In a time when so much in our country seems not to be working, we not only need to focus on what’s going on nationally, but what is going on in our own backyards.
Anthony Walraven, with ChangePeoria, will lead a discussion on the issue of welcoming cities. According to ChangePeoria, few topics are more prone to misinformation than undocumented immigrants and efforts such as welcoming cities that exist to protect them. The topic often never moves past sound bites and animus. The truth is that undocumented people livelaw abiding lives where they work, send their children to school, and contribute to every community they live in. ChangePeoria believes that declaring Peoria a welcoming city not only allows the most vulnerable citizens to come out of the shadows, but it also makes our city safer, more attractive to live in, and more economically prosperous. Social time begins at 5 p.m. Food and beverages are available for purchase. The event is free and open to the public.Drinks and Dialogue is offered on the 3rd Wednesday of the month, starting at 5:30 p.m. and ending promptly at 6:30 p.m., always at a local restaurant, to discuss local, state and national topics relating to approved LWV positions aimed at “Making Democracy Work.”

Peoria to Palestine: Welcome to the Occupation

BY LAWRENCE MAUSHARD
“I feel like in heaven. It’s like heaven, really, in Peoria,” explained Mohammad Mohammad, 29, during a conversation on Main Street near Sheridan Road.
Now that’s something you don’t hear everyday.
A native of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, Mohammad has lived in central Illinois since 2001. “It’s way better than back home, you know, because every time you try to go somewhere, there’s an (Israeli) checkpoint,” he said.
Mohammad is not alone among the Palestinian-American community in central Illinois with his assessment of life in the River City compared to occupied Palestine.
“I love Peoria. Yes, sir!” enthused Abed Fookah, 48, owner of the most visible local Palestinian business, the nearly 3-year-old Jerusalem Restaurant at 2027 W. Farmington Road across from lower Bradley Park.
“All this food is Palestine food. Middle Eastern,” said the Ramallah native who has lived in Peoria since 2006, and believes his restaurant is the only Palestinian eatery in town. “Everybody love Palestine. Everybody love peace. The people here, they just show them one side. But you talk to them, and they understand the Palestinians are nice people. They know that!”
And Mohammad Hussein, 63, a native of the Aluban al-churqy village just outside Nablus in the occupied West Bank, also thinks highly of Peoria. “It’s nice. That’s why I stay here since 2001,” remarked the senior gentleman visiting the Jerusalem Restaurant. “But the Palestinian people need peace. Just to live like everybody else. Now we don’t have it (peace).”
I spoke with these Palestinian Americans in Peoria immediately prior to departing in mid-April for besieged Gaza and the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem to directly observe some of the effects of the continuing Israeli occupation on the Palestinian people since at least the 1967 Arab-Israeli War.
Turned away by the Egyptian authorities in northern Sinai shortly before attempting to enter Gaza through the Rafah border crossing, I rerouted to Amman, Jordan, and traveled overland into occupied East Jerusalem via the King Hussein Bridge crossing. Israeli authorities control every entry point to Palestine.
Next week here looks to be rather dramatic with the controversial U.S. embassy relocation to Jerusalem set for May 14 when Israel will mark its 70th anniversary, followed on the 15th when Palestinians commemorate the Nakba Day “catastrophe” recalling their mass expulsions and village destructions by Zionist armed forces. The Islamic Month of Ramadan also begins in the region on or about May 15 bringing hundreds of thousands of Muslim pilgrims into occupied East Jerusalem to the landmark Al Aqsa Mosque.
Published reports say the upcoming weekend prior to these commemorations will see the highly controversial annual Jerusalem Day events when Israelis, mostly Zionist settlers, march provocatively through the Muslim Quarter in Jerusalem’s Old City marking the ’67 Israeli military capture of Palestinian East Jerusalem. The march often involves incendiary “Death to Arabs” chants and actions while being protected by cordons of Israeli soldiers and police. All this on top of recent #GreatReturnMarch demonstrations by Palestinians in Gaza where Israeli military snipers from their side of the border have shot dead at least 40 people, including two clearly marked press members and wounding more than 5,000 others by live fire, tear gas attacks and other means.
Several weeks spent living and observing and speaking with the people in the Muslim Quarter of occupied East Jerusalem’s Old City, as well visits in Hebron, Jenin, Ramallah and elsewhere may not account for much, but it’s easy to recognize a military occupation when you see it. As for experiencing it your entire life and understanding its progression in the lives of those who are born and die here is far greater. One of the people to help explain that is Nada Awad, advocacy officer for Al-Quds University’s Community Action Center (CAC):
“When we talk about Israel, we have to talk about colonialism, we have to talk about occupation and not talk about war and terrorism. Because where we live, we are occupied. We live under occupation, and fighting occupation is our right. Whereas in the United States, what you hear is that Palestinians are at war with Israel. This does not exist. We are not at war. We are fighting occupation. So we have to change the narrative that has been . . . a lot of propaganda happening since ‘48.”
Zionist duty to forcibly transfer Palestinians
Awad continued with a position not heard often on U.S. mainstream media sources: “Since ‘48, Israel has had a very clear agenda: to create a state on the Palestinian land. And in order to do so, they had to forcibly transfer Palestinians. It was their duty, you know, for all these Zionist leaders that clearly stated that in order to create the state, we have to expel the Palestinians. And this is a plan that has been ongoing since then, since ’48 until today; and it’s continuous, a continuous crime that was not recognized from the basis in ’48. It should have been recognized as a crime.”
Pressed about conditions on the ground, Awad spoke from an office location only yards away from Israeli military units controlling access to the Al Aqsa Mosque grounds, the holiest site in Islam only after Mecca and Medina, as well as the final checkpoint in the Muslim Quarter leading into the plaza surrounding the Western Wall, a site revered by countless numbers of the Jewish faith.
“Those efforts to forcibly transfer Palestinians are increasing. Definitely. Definitely increasing. We are seeing it increasing with the laws in Jerusalem, but also the bedouins who are being forcibly transferred around Jerusalem. From Hebron being heavily colonized. (Like) in 1948, it’s the same idea.
“I just talk about Jerusalem. We are very specific (at the CAC). It can be more generalized, but for me, the message I want to convey every time I speak about the situation in Jerusalem is we have to stop seeing the occupation as a good provider of services, etc. The occupation tries to show itself as a democracy that has everyone (in mind); in Jerusalem we have the three religions. And we have to stop looking at the occupation this way. We have to change glasses, and look at it the way it is.
“Palestinians in Jerusalem live at risk of forcible transfer every day.”
Many Palestinians cannot even stay in Jerusalem because the Israeli government has targets, Nada Awad said, noting the Israeli government wants to maintain numbers of about 30 percent Palestinians but will allow up to 40 percent.
“We have to (nonviolently) fight to be able to stay in our city we were born in. Where our grandparents were born in, and where our grand-grandparents were born in, Nada Awad said, adding “If there is one message about Jerusalem, it’s forcible transfer. It’s not the only city where there is forcible transfer, but the fact that Americans through their administration has recognized the unity of the city, and denied that East Jerusalem is occupied in an illegal event.”
According to a published history, East Jerusalem was integrated into the Israeli controlled sectors of the city by extension of its municipal borders and placed under administration of Israel in 1967. In a unanimous General Assembly resolution, the United Nations declared the measures trying to change the status of the city invalid. Jerusalem was effectively annexed by Israel in 1980, an act internationally condemned.
In December 2017, the Trump administration announced its official recognition of a unified Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, but delayed relocating its embassy from Tel Aviv until now. The embassy move will be in contravention of international law and long accepted diplomatic norms. No other major Western power recognizes Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, including every NATO member state. Israel has militarily occupied East Jerusalem since 1967, which the Palestine authorities also claim as their rightful capital. Trump himself may attend the embassy transfer, though no confirmation is yet provided.
A U.S. State Department official, who asked not to be referred to by name, at the Jerusalem Consul General office, which will be the temporary site of the new embassy, responded via email about the embassy transfer:
“We are proud to announce that on May 14 we dedicate the new U.S. Embassy to Israel in Jerusalem. In doing so, President Trump fulfilled a major campaign promise. As the President stated in December, for the United States, recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel is a recognition of reality. Seventy years ago the United States, under President Truman, recognized the State of Israel. Ever since then, Jerusalem has been the seat of the modern Israeli government. And today, after years of promises and waiting, we are fulfilling a pledge; Jerusalem is now also the home of the U.S. Embassy to Israel.”
Perhaps trying to minimize the international controversy surrounding the unprecedented U.S. recognition of Jerusalem, the State Department official added: “The United States continues to support the status quo with regard to the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount, and we are committed to continuing to respect Jordan’s special role regarding holy sites in Jerusalem. By taking the long-overdue step of moving our embassy, we are not taking a position on final status issues. We are not taking a position on the specific boundaries of Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem nor on the resolution of contested borders. Those questions are up to the parties involved. We remain committed to advancing an agreement between the parties that leads to a lasting and comprehensive peace.”
4th Geneva Convention still applies
“This is very important for people to know what it means,” Nada Awad remarked about the status of military occupation. “It is not just a term, occupation. The Law of Occupation, and the 4th Geneva Convention that’s applicable in occupied East Jerusalem provides protection for Palestinians. And removing the term “occupied” means that this is not applicable anymore, and the 4th Geneva is not applicable any more. And this protection, we’ll lose it as a population under occupation. It’s very important.”
Nada Awad stressed what those in solidarity with the human rights conditions in occupied Palestine can do: “We call on the international community to do what it should do. To bring back Israel to legality. By all means that are legitimate. It means if we lose also the Geneva Convention, the Palestinian population will lose protection. This is the standard to people living under occupation. We have that. We cannot lose that.”
Palestinian fears concerning the loss of occupation status center around the Trump administration’s decision for the first time in U.S. history to remove the term “occupied” in reference to the Palestinian territories in its annual 2018 State Department Report on Human Rights.
The same State Department official referred to earlier also responded via email to a question regarding the recent omission of the occupation description: “We have retitled the Human Rights report to refer to the commonly-used geographic names of the area the report covers: Israel, Golan, West Bank, and Gaza. That is in line with our practices generally. We also believe it is clearer and more useful for readers seeking information on human rights in those specific areas. The use of the term has not been barred, and that will be apparent on reading through the text of the report.”
The Palestinian advocacy officer sat at her desk dressed in casual clothes like any other millennial with no veil or hijab, though at least one other female in the office was dressed in more traditional attire. Young European and American CAC workers and volunteers also were present.
“I think this is the most important idea,” she stressed. “What does it mean to recognize East Jerusalem as part of Israel, and (its illegal) annexation? It means they are denying Palestinians the right to live in their city. They are denying Palestinians. And it’s continuous. The United States has continued to support Israel, have continued to support forcible transfer, which is a war crime against humanity. So the idea is, this is a responsibility (to oppose forcible transfers), a responsibility that should be taken, and policies should be changed.”
As for what Americans can do to help Palestinians, “For Jerusalem, for one thing, oppose (your) government decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. I don’t know if there is any movement in the United States that opposes the administration’s decision. That is one thing,” remarked the knowledgeable spokeswoman in spacious modern CAC offices within what was once St. Julian’s Church built during a European Crusader campaign more than 800 years ago. “The other things are to raise awareness of the (ongoing occupation) and stop using the security argument all the time when we talk about Israel.”
Asked if any countries are, in fact, effectively supporting Palestinians in these forcible transfer issues, Nada Awad didn’t have much good news.
“Well, there were in the U.N., for example. We have a lot of states discussing this issue publically, issuing statements,” she noted. “The European Union issued a very strong statement against the (most recent residency) law when it was issued. But it stays in the terms of declarations and statements, and it does not materialize.”
For the past two years, Nada Awad has worked at the Community Action Center, operated by Al-Quds University, which is one of several institutions providing pro bono legal aid to Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem. Other community services provided by the university in the Old City include library, cultural center and Arabic language school currently under renovation.
CAC fights occupation through legal means
“But this center specifically, the Community Action Center, is providing legal aid because they live in a situation of occupation, and they have to fight the occupation on a daily basis, whether it’s because of residency revocation Israel is possibly transferring Palestinians from the city. And to fight this forcible transfer, we fight it legally, through the legal Israeli system, which is illegal. We have to deal with the Israeli system since we realized Israel is, the laws, are becoming more and more discriminatory, more and more clearly violating international law and more and more clearly calling for forcible transfer. We have been working on this aspect of international advocacy.
“We work mostly with other Palestinian and international organizations, human rights organizations. And we lobby states, whether it’s in Palestine, or through the U.N. or through the other representative offices in Jerusalem in Palestine or abroad. The idea is to lobby for changes in the laws . . . and to get criminals, war criminals, and people committing crimes against humanity in the Israeli government to be tried in international courts.”
How busy are the caseloads for the Center’s staff lawyers and support employees? “We have dozens of cases coming in everyday. And we are open six days a week,” she said.
Revoking Palestinian residency, redrawing the borders, not granting family reunification, not granting child registration and demolishing homes in a systematic discriminatory manner are Israeli occupation policies all working together in order to change the overall demographic equation in occupied East Jerusalem, according to Nada Awad.
“The demographic goal is what makes this all become normal, you know,” she added in a matter-of-fact way. “In the (pending Israeli Knesset parliamentary) bills, it is clearly stated it is for demographic goals. ‘And how can the Jewish capital of the Jewish state not be Jewish?’ To be a Jewish state they recognize a percentage of Palestinians or non-Jews living in this state should be a maximum of 20 percent. (Israeli Prime Minister) Netanyahu re-uses these alarming statistics, speaking of, ‘If the (non-Jews) become 40 (percent), there is no more Jewish state. So we have to use extreme measures.’ And he said it very clearly.”
Israel could not kill Palestinian identity
Do people at the CAC working daily with Palestinians under direct military occupation remain optimistic? “Yeah, always,” Nada Awad replied without hesitation. ”The fact that the Palestinian identity is very strong today shows Israel and the colonial aspect of Israel could not kill the Palestinian identity, although we are divided by now. We have East Jerusalem Palestinians, we have West Bank Palestinians, and Gaza Palestinians, refugees all over the world, in Lebanon, Syria and Jordan, all over the place. And still you have very strong Palestinian identity.”
The determined Palestinian spokeswoman maintained that “we have not forgotten the right of return. People are still marching. People have not stopped since 1948. We have not stopped fighting. The fight is very difficult because, well, the power imbalance is very clear, but the fact that we are still fighting the occupation keeps me very optimistic in all ways. In all legitimate ways, we fight occupation, whether it’s through legal services or through advocacy or through (other means) like Boycott, Divest, Sanction.
“I’m not saying the Center supports BDS. But personally now, I’m speaking personally, not in the name of the Center, it’s what touches most of the occupation, which is the economy, and this is why BDS is being fought so hard by the Israelis. Because they feel pressure, and this is one of the only times, one of the only tools we have, to bring back Israel to legality because this is what scares them. If the West stops economic ties, Israel’s economy would fold. So it’s very important.”
And the loss of legal residency for a growing number of Palestinians in Jerusalem leaves them wide open to exploitation by nearly everyone around them with an agenda.
“You can receive a first permit, but it has to be renewed every year,” Nada Awad noted. “Then you try and renew it, and they will tell you ‘no.’ So you can find yourself living in Jerusalem without a permit. This person cannot support, cannot go out, visit their family who lives outside Jerusalem. Well, you will try to work even for an Israeli company who will hire you for less. Of course, everyone without proper documentation is open for society to exploit them. Even for lawyers to exploit them. When they’re vulnerable, it can be an Israeli exploiting you; it can be a Palestinian; it can be your family.
“For example, your husband will . . . you are beaten by your husband, but you don’t have any papers. And you have children. And you want to go to the police, but your husband say, ‘Ah!’ and you can’t say anything. Or the police say where are your papers? And they can forcibly transfer you. So you don’t go to the police about the issue of being beaten or violence at home, domestic violence. Because you’re afraid you will be forcibly transferred. You will be left without your children.”
The CAC provides a referral system for people with mental health problems, chronic diseases based on stress, the need for psycho-social support, and other physical and emotional issues all connected to the ongoing Israeli occupation.
Nada Awad said she has lived behind a checkpoint her whole life, and regularly walks through four or five checkpoints daily from the Damascus Gate to her office, but usually is not stopped because she does not wear a head cover or veil.
For many of her fellow Palestinians, the experience in the Old City and elsewhere is quite different: “The youth, men, veiled women, when (Israeli authorities) see clearly that a person is Palestinian, they will stop them every time. (They) check the bags. For men, (they) do a belly check, and put them on the wall. It’s very humiliating. It’s very important to keep that in mind that this situation only creates wanting vengeance, but not in a sense that everything is a reaction to (only these checkpoint conditions).
“The idea behind the protests and demonstration is the end of this occupation, the illegal occupation, that has been going on for 70 years.”
Israel remains one of the largest recipient nations of American aid, much of which helps to sustain Tel Aviv and maintain its decades-long occupation and suppression of Palestine. According to the wiki page, since 1985, America has provided nearly $3 billion in grants annually to Israel, the largest annual recipient of U.S. aid from 1976 to 2004, and the largest cumulative recipient of aid since W.W. II, $121 billion not adjusted for inflation. In 2014, the United States provided $3.1 billion in foreign military aid. Israel also benefits from about $8 billion in loan guarantees. Almost all U.S. aid to Israel is now in the form of military assistance.
As for Palestine, the numbers don’t remotely add up. According to published reports, the U.S. State Department plans to spend about $215 million in economic assistance for the West Bank and Gaza this year and has requested another $215 million in its 2019 budget request. Those numbers are subject to cuts, and the United States recently cut $65 million in separate funding for the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees.
Back in Peoria, folks like Mohammad are starting to ask for a different reality.
“It’s not fair, you know, what the Israelis do (to occupied Palestinian people). Every year, the United States funds billions of dollars for weapons for Israelis. This money, you know, should not go to weapons. This money should go to hospitals in the United States to treat cancers. What’s better, money going for weapons or hospitals and schools in the United States? Israel gets all this money from America. They fix their country. This money, instead of going to Israel, why America does not use it for their own people?

Video shot by Lawrence Maushard showing confrontation between local Palestinian youth and Israeli soldiers on the main street in East Jerusalem’s Old City:
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipMMM12p1u4EFjwjDMVLH496rP_qdSpjgMUvBVsqZwECXVsXkcZUSVZbt6jqtnR_9w?key=YnY0RUt6czgxLUpQMnVWcVFaUFZhUUViVExVc2lR

The author resides on Peoria’s East Bluff. More of his work is at www.maushard.com.

PEORIA ACLU-Keynote Speaker on Civil Rights and Justice

 

 

 CONTACT:  Jeff Johnson, 309.397.4772; JTJohnson.PHR@gmail.com

Jimena Lopez,309.573.3283;jimenalopez83@gmail.com

 

PEORIA ACLU Chapter’s Annual Meeting is May 10, 2018   

 

The Peoria ACLU Area Chapter’s 57th annual meeting is scheduled for Thursday, May 10, 2018 at the IVY Club, 1502 N. Galena Road, Peoria Heights.

 

The guest speaker will beCeleste Stewart Stack, an attorney with extensive experience litigating constitutional violations including wrongful convictions, police misconduct, psychiatric issues and conflict of interest cases. She worked in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office in Chicago for three decades where she held various supervisory positions for 15 years, including supervisor of the Conviction Integrity Unit which was created based on the organization set out in her application for federal grant funds.  Her units were responsible for reviewing and litigating 1,000 post-conviction petitions. She assisted Chicago attorney Andrew Hale on the Cleve Heidelberg wrongful-conviction case as well as other Central Illinois post- conviction and civil rights cases, and she recently opened an office for Hale Law in Peoria at 456 Fulton Street.

 

Sam Belfer Awards will be presented to Dr. Rahmat Na’Allah and Judge Lisa Wilson.   Dr. Rahmat Na’Allah is a family physician practicing at UnityPoint Health, and she is on the faculty at University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria. She believes access to health care is a basic human right and all women should have access to reproductive health care. Judge Lisa Wilson has been an Associate Judge in the Tenth Judicial Circuit since 2009, She is presently the chair of the Tenth Judicial Court Pro Bono Committee and the Tenth Judicial Circuit Family Violence Coordinating Council among many other organizations.

 

The event begins with a social hour at 5:30 p.m. and dinner at 6:30 p.m. with the program and speaker, presentation of awards and election of officers to follow. Reservations for the dinner are due by May 2.  An invitation can be downloaded from the chapter website, at http://aclupeoria.org.

 

The public is invited, and welcome to attend the program free of charge. Media coverage is also welcome.      ***

$100 million settlement sought against Peoria city and county in Heidelberg lawsuit

 

 

A lawsuit was filed in federal court in Peoria Thursday against Peoria and Peoria County seeking more than $100 million and a jury trial on behalf of the estate of Cleve Heidelberg, a Peoria man who was imprisoned for 47 years and died 10 months after his conviction was vacated.

One of the attorneys for Heidelberg said the case is no longer just about him but about the integrity of the criminal justice system.

The suit claims evidence against Heidelberg was falsified, destroyed and manufactured. The suit claims police, sheriff deputies and state’s attorneys acted in a conspiratorial manner to cover up misconduct.

Cleve Heidelberg was 27 on May 26, 1970 when Peoria County Sheriff’s Deputy Ray Espinoza was shot and killed in a botched robbery attempt at the old Bellevue Drive-In movie theater. The suit claims police and prosecutors knew evidence against Heidelberg was falsified and that an FBI report failing to find his fingerprints on the murder weapon was suppressed. In fact, there was no forensic evidence linking Heidelberg to the murder.

Prosecutors originally sought the death penalty. Heidelberg was sentenced to 99 to 175 years in prison and always maintained his innocent.

The lawsuit reviews events leading up to the botched robbery and murder of Espinoza and highlights discrepancies and Constitutional violations.

Hours after the shooting, a sheriff’s deputy eavesdropped and listened to the protected conversation between Heidelberg and his public defender. The police then used that information, the lawsuit charges, to identify and intimidate all the eyewitnesses who could corroborate that Heidelberg was not the shooter and had loaned his car to another man who then loaned it to yet another man who committed the murder.

That illegal eavesdropping was unknown to Heidelberg who believed his public defender was leaking information to police. Heidelberg decided to proceed without an attorney and to represent himself in a complicated legal case.

Reached for comment, one of Heidelberg’s attorneys Amy Hijjawi said the evidence shows “three agencies of the state of Illinois colluded to defeat an independent investigation.”

She said the Peoria County State’s Attorney and special prosecutor colluded in recent post conviction hearings much as there had been collusion against Heidelberg in 1970.

“That is so egregious to me,” she said.

This case is no longer about Cleve Heidelberg, she said, but about the criminal justice system.

We live with the belief that the police and courts make decisions based on facts, but in this case, facts were destroyed, fabricated, manufactured and suppressed, Hijjawi said.

Peoria County State’s Attorney Jerry Brady did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Will Trump push ERA to victory?

The Illinois Legislature could decide next month to vote to make Illinois the 37thstate to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. That would be the right thing to do.

Opposition in Illinois includes a group on the extreme hate list compiled by the Southern Poverty Law Center: Illinois Family Institute, East Peoria.

Ironically, having a misogynist hate monger in the White House has energized the nation’s resistance to sexism and hate.

Here is the April 20 lead editorial in The New York Times:

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/19/opinion/a-rebuke-to-trump-a-century-in-the-making.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region&region=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-region