person:mark duggan

  • « Il faut être clair : un monde a pris fin, il n’y aura pas de retour en arrière »
    http://www.bastamag.net/Il-faut-etre-clair-un-monde-a-pris-fin-il-n-y-aura-pas-de-retour-en-arrier

    Pour combattre efficacement l’Etat islamique et son offre #Politique de mort et de désespoir, « nous devons réfléchir à la révolte qui est à la racine de ces crimes », suggère l’anthropologue Alain Bertho, qui prépare un livre sur « les enfants du chaos ». A la racine du mal, la fin des utopies, enterrée avec l’effondrement de tous les courants politiques progressistes. Le XXIe siècle aurait oublié l’avenir au profit de la gestion du risque et de la peur, indifférent à la colère des jeunes générations. Entre (...)

    #Décrypter

    / A la une, Politique, #Altermondialisme, Indignés de tous les pays..., #Entretiens, #Classes_populaires, Guerres et résolution des (...)

    #Indignés_de_tous_les_pays... #Guerres_et_résolution_des_conflits

    • Tous connaissent un déclic commun : une conversion, une rupture et la découverte d’une autre discipline de soi pour redonner un sens à leurs vies.
      La réussite d’une telle offre politique, celle de l’État islamique, tient au fait que, pour des gens déstabilisés, elle donne du sens au monde et à la vie qu’ils peuvent y mener. Elle leur donne même une mission.(...)
      Comme dit Slavoj Zizek : « Visiblement, il est plus facile d’imaginer la fin du monde que la fin du capitalisme. » Pour les djihadistes, cette fin est proche dans un monde de chaos politique, moral, économique ou climatique. Le projet politique de Daech donne du sens à leur chemin vers la mort. Il leur propose un destin. À l’espoir de la #libération_individuelle_et_collective qui portait les mobilisations passées, ils ont substitué une problématique de fin du monde et de jugement dernier.
      Leur libération, c’est de mourir en martyr ! (...) « Il n’y a que les martyrs pour être sans pitié ni crainte et, croyez-moi, le jour du triomphe des martyrs, c’est l’incendie universel » , prophétisait Jacques Lacan en 1959. Nous y sommes.(...)

      Ils ne font pas la guerre pour créer un État, comme lors d’une lutte pour l’indépendance : ils créent un « État » pour faire la guerre. L’État islamique n’a aucune vision de la paix sinon le triomphe final du califat contre des ennemis de plus en plus nombreux. Mais depuis 2001, l’idée de « paix comme but de guerre » (vieille conception clausewitzienne) n’a déjà plus cours chez les grandes puissances embarquées dans une « guerre sans fin » contre le terrorisme. Quels sont les buts de guerre ou les objectifs de paix de la coalition en Syrie ou en Irak ? On n’en sait rien. Le djihadisme nous a entraînés sur son propre terrain.(...)
      Avec l’effondrement du communisme et la clôture de toute #perspective_révolutionnaire, c’est l’avenir qu’on a perdu en route. C’est l’idée du possible qui s’est effondrée. Nous ne sommes plus dans une démarche historique. On ne parle plus d’#avenir mais de #gestion du risque et de probabilité. On gère le quotidien avec des responsables politiques qui manipulent le risque et la peur comme moyens de #gouvernement(...)
      A-t-on bien réfléchi à ce que pouvait être la figure d’une révolte sans espoir ? Ces rages radicales sont aujourd’hui devant de telles impasses qu’elles ouvrent la porte à des offres politiques de mort (...)
      La classe politique est complètement investie dans l’espace du pouvoir et de l’#État et coupée du reste de la société, en décalage total, quel que soit le parti. La #politique n’est plus une puissance subjective capable de rassembler et d’ouvrir des possibles.
      Le poids et la force du mouvement ouvrier reposaient sur sa capacité à agréger des populations variées, notamment immigrées, dans un espoir commun. La fin des #collectifs, de la notion de classes sociales, de l’idée qu’il existe un « nous » a presque fait disparaître la conscience commune d’une action encore possible. (...)
      C’est la politique comme mobilisation populaire et construction du #commun que nous avons perdue et qu’il nous faut retrouver. Quitte à provoquer un peu, je dirai que l’urgence, aujourd’hui, c’est moins la « déradicalisation » et l’hégémonie des marches militaires sur le débat politique que la montée d’une autre radicalité, une radicalité d’espérance collective qui tarisse à la source le recrutement djihadiste. Il nous faut retrouver le sens du futur et du possible, et résister au piège de la mobilisation guerrière que nous tendent les terroristes.

      #Alain_Bertho

    • Nous avons un problème avec la clôture du XXe siècle et l’effondrement du communisme. La fin du communisme, ce n’est pas seulement la fin de régimes et d’institutions en Europe de l’Est et en Russie, c’est un ensemble de références culturelles qui s’écroule, communes à tous les courants politiques progressistes. Malgré la réalité policière et répressive des régimes communistes « réels », un changement de société était, à l’époque, encore perçu comme possible et s’inscrivait dans une démarche historique, une idée du progrès. L’avenir se préparait aujourd’hui. L’hypothèse révolutionnaire qui a ouvert la modernité (la Révolution française) a été une référence politique commune à ceux qui voulaient la révolution comme à ceux qui lui préféraient des transitions pacifiques et « légales » Avec l’effondrement du communisme et la clôture de toute perspective révolutionnaire, c’est l’avenir qu’on a perdu en route. C’est l’idée du possible qui s’est effondrée. Nous ne sommes plus dans une démarche historique. On ne parle plus d’avenir mais de gestion du risque et de probabilité [5]. On gère le quotidien avec des responsables politiques qui manipulent le risque et la peur comme moyens de gouvernement, le risque sécuritaire comme le risque monétaire (la dette), qui parlent beaucoup du réchauffement climatique mais sont incapables d’anticiper la catastrophe annoncée.

      Les jeunes, ceux qui incarnent biologiquement, culturellement et socialement cet avenir de l’humanité, font les frais de cette impasse collective et sont particulièrement maltraités. Les sociétés n’investissent plus dans leur futur, l’éducation ou les universités. La jeunesse est stigmatisée et réprimée. Des pays du monde entier, du Royaume-Uni au Chili en passant par le Kenya, sont ainsi marqués depuis des années par des mobilisations étudiantes parfois violentes contre l’augmentation des frais d’inscription dans les universités. Partout, des morts de jeunes impliquant des policiers génèrent des émeutes : regardez les émeutes de Ferguson ou de Baltimore, aux Etats-Unis ; les trois semaines d’émeutes en Grèce, en décembre 2008, après le meurtre par deux policiers du jeune Alexander Grigoropoulos ; ou les cinq jours d’émeutes en Angleterre après la mort de Mark Duggan en 2011. Pour ces quelques émeutes médiatiquement visibles, il y en a des dizaines d’autres (lire notre article « L’augmentation des émeutes : un phénomène mondial »). Une société qui n’arrive plus à s’inventer pousse les gens vers des mobilisations de désespoir et de rage.

  • Royaume-Uni : la police a agi « légalement » en tuant Mark Duggan
    http://www.la-croix.com/Actualite/Monde/Royaume-Uni-la-police-a-agi-legalement-en-tuant-Mark-Duggan-2014-01-09-108

    La justice britannique a conclu mercredi que la police a agi « légalement » en tirant sur un homme dont la mort a déclenché de violentes émeutes en 2011, un jugement accueilli avec colère par les proches.

    WTF, The Police ? Mark Duggan, Deaths In Custody & Cops Off Campus
    http://thequietus.com/articles/14242-mark-duggan-cops-off-campus-met-police

    Duggan’s death, to many minds, represents the very worst of the Metropolitan Police’s behaviour, and the inquest’s conclusions suggest that this behaviour, even when it involves the killing of an unarmed man, will not be punished through the justice system.

    But, while the murder of an unarmed man is clearly the most grievous of the police’s actions, the Met continues to overstep the mark in more quotidian ways.

    [...]

    2013 saw a total of 15 deaths in custody, and a further 12 following other contact with the police. These figures buck an otherwise downward trend over the course of the last decade. There have been more than 300 deaths in custody since 1998. To date, not a single police officer has been successfully prosecuted.

    Students explicitly recognise that they are not the first to experience police violence, and nor do they suffer it most acutely. A statement from the Goldsmiths Solidarity Network, published in the wake of December’s demonstrations, says: “The actions of the police last week in Bloomsbury have attracted more media attention than the far more brutal violence committed against people of colour daily. It would be nothing short of a disgrace if we fail to point out that police violence is structural and a constant feature of life for hundreds of thousands of Londoners. It would be shameful if we fail to act in solidarity with others facing police violence.”

    #police #Royaume-Uni #justice #répression

  • Will the UK ever give up on its racist immigration policy?
    http://africasacountry.com/will-the-uk-ever-give-up-on-its-racist-immigration-policy

    There have been lots of stories in the British press recently related to immigration, and these have made it clear that a sentiment still exists that is opposed to the familiar xenophobia with which the topic is usually discussed in the UK. For a moment it has seemed that perhaps not everyone around us is […]

    #OPINION #POLITICS #Ambalavaner_Sivanandan #G4S #Jimmy_Mubenga #Mark_Duggan #Paul_Gilroy #Racist_Van #Stuart_Hall #UKBA

  • Unfair cops: it’s not about ‘bad apples’ | Red Pepper
    http://www.redpepper.org.uk/unfair-cops

    In recent months the Metropolitan Police has been rocked by allegations of collusion in the phone hacking conspiracy and revelations of the extraordinary level of hospitality enjoyed by the former Met commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson. Even as it cleared Stephenson and three other senior police officers of misconduct, the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) was moved to comment that ‘the public will make its own judgements about whether any senior public official should accept hospitality to this extent from anyone.’

    ...

    Political police

    The fact that the modern British police constitutes a political force is becoming increasingly self-evident. Through a variety of channels, including direct lobbying of politicians and the involvement of the Association of Chief Police Officers in key policy committees, the police have long been in the business of influencing government policy. They also do a great deal of networking with local government, private industry and, of course, the media.

    ...

    Deaths in custody

    According to figures published by the respected pressure group Inquest, there have been 409 deaths in custody since 2000. Inquest has identified numerous deaths that raise issues about standards of care, such as deaths due to self-injury, alleged drunkenness or drug intoxication, or poor medical care, as well as deaths that raise issues of excessive use of force by police officers.

    These figures do not include the three deaths that occurred after police restraint at the end of August. Philip Hulmes, aged 53, and Dale Burns, 27, both died after police discharged taser guns. Dale Burns was reportedly shocked three times by a taser. Jacob Michael, aged 25, died after police restrained him using pepper spray. Witnesses to his arrest have described how the police punched and kicked him while he was on the floor, restrained and in handcuffs. Eleven police officers were involved in the arrest. Inquest reacted to these latest deaths by stating that ‘it is imperative that the police are reminded that they cannot act with impunity’.

    There have also been 32 fatal shootings by police in the past ten years. The latest was Mark Duggan, whose death at the hands of the police sparked the riots in August (see page 24). The failure of the police to provide prompt and accurate information to the Duggan family has exacerbated problems. In addition, the IPCC has had to apologise for ‘inadvertently misleading the press’, by implying in a telephone conversation to a media contact shortly after the incident that it was Mark Duggan who had opened fire first. As it turned out, the only bullets fired had been fired by the police.

    For all the deaths, including the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes as he got on a tube train at Stockwell, there has not been one single successful prosecution of any police officer. The IPCC has claimed that this has been in part due to a reluctance of juries to convict police officers, but campaigners point to an evident lack of will on the part of the police, the IPCC and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to conduct robust investigations and prosecutions.

  • Mark Duggan was not armed when shot by police (The Guardian)
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/nov/18/mark-duggan-ipcc-investigation-riots

    The investigation into the death of Mark Duggan has found no forensic evidence that he was carrying a gun when he was shot dead by police on 4 August, the Guardian has learned. A gun collected by Duggan earlier in the day was recovered 10 to 14 feet away, on the other side of a low fence from his body. He was killed outside the vehicle he was travelling in, after a police marksman fired twice. (...) Source: The Guardian

  • Revealed: Mark Duggan was not armed when shot by police | UK news | The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/nov/18/mark-duggan-ipcc-investigation-riots?CMP=twt_gu

    The investigation into the death of Mark Duggan has found no forensic evidence that he was carrying a gun when he was shot dead by police on 4 August, the Guardian has learned.

    A gun collected by Duggan earlier in the day was recovered 10 to 14 feet away, on the other side of a low fence from his body. He was killed outside the vehicle he was travelling in, after a police marksman fired twice.

    The new details raise questions about the official version of events. The shooting triggered some of the worst riots in modern British history, which began in Tottenham, north London, in response to the treatment of the Duggan family. The investigation into Duggan’s death is being carried out by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), but the Guardian has learned new details of the shooting, and a much more complex picture than first revealed is emerging.

  • Police victimise London protest against deaths in custody
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/oct2011/uffc-o31.shtml

    Saturday saw the 13th annual United Families and Friends Campaign (UFFC) march in protest at deaths in police custody and in secure psychiatric hospitals. The list of deaths in custody gets longer, and now stands at more than 3,100. The police killing of Mark Duggan, a 29-year-old father of four in Tottenham, which triggered August’s riots, brought many to the demonstration.

    ....

    Participants in the demonstration pointed to the connection between police brutality and social conditions. Jarrett pointed to how working class youth are written off very early on, in their school years. “They exclude a child [from school] in Tottenham, that’s it. They exclude a child in [more affluent] St John’s Wood, they find another school.”

  • “Although the riots in the UK were triggered by the suspicious shooting of Mark Duggan, everyone agrees that they express a deeper unease – but of what kind? As with the car burnings in the Paris banlieues in 2005, the UK rioters had no message to deliver. (There is a clear contrast with the massive student demonstrations in November 2010, which also turned to violence. The students were making clear that they rejected the proposed reforms to higher education.) This is why it is difficult to conceive of the UK rioters in Marxist terms, as an instance of the emergence of the revolutionary subject; they fit much better the Hegelian notion of the ‘rabble’, those outside organised social space, who can express their discontent only through ‘irrational’ outbursts of destructive violence – what Hegel called ‘abstract negativity’.”
    http://www.lrb.co.uk/2011/08/19/slavoj-zizek/shoplifters-of-the-world-unite

    • Shoplifters of the World Unite - Slavoj Žižek on the meaning of the #riots

      If the commonplace that we live in a post-ideological era is true in any sense, it can be seen in this recent outburst of violence. This was zero-degree protest, a violent action demanding nothing. In their desperate attempt to find meaning in the riots, the sociologists and editorial-writers obfuscated the enigma the riots presented.

      #philosophie_politique #kind_of

  • Londres brûle – causes et conséquences des émeutes, une perspective anarchiste | Workers Solidarity Movement
    http://wsm.ie/c/londres-br%C3%BBle-causes-cons%C3%A9quences-perspective-anarchiste

    Le meurtre de Mark Duggan par la police a engendré quatre nuits d’émeutes dans toute l’Angleterre. Le déclencheur immédiat en a été le meurtre lui-même, mais aussi la goujaterie de la police envers la famille et les amis de Mark. Cependant, les émeutes ont rapidement pris une dimension plus large, exprimant une colère et une aliénation plus générales, colère qui trop souvent a été mal ciblée, frappant les cibles les plus proches et à portée de main. Il y eut par conséquent de grandes destructions de biens, dans des quartiers déjà déshérités, et des attaques anti-sociales contre des riverains. Malgré ces aspects, les racines des émeutes résident dans les conditions économiques et politiques qui régissent ces zones, non pas dans la “piètre éducation” des parents ou dans la “criminalité aveugle”. Ces conditions ont été créées par cette même élite de politiciens et d’hommes d’affaire qui en appellent maintenant à un retour à la normalité et à la répression. [Thanks to liberationirlande for the translation of this article, you can read the orignal in English]

    #ukriots

  • No Justice No Peace: The Riot is the Rhyme of the Unheared, Let us Begin to Listen. « AnotherCountry
    http://attheinlandsea.wordpress.com/2011/08/12/no-justice-no-peace-the-riot-is-the-rhyme-of-the-unheared-

    Five people are dead, more than one thousand in jail and Reuters report that Gaddafi has recognized the Tottenham rioters as the legitimate government of Britain. What the hell is going on?

    At the eye of this storm lies the body of Mark Duggan, murdered by the metropolitan police. In the past the cops have been careful to leave what they presumably fell is a “respectful” length of time between political and racial murders, at least so the last can drop out of memory, but the point blank shooting of this young man has come up straight between the beating to death of Ian Tomlinson, so that nicety even, seems of another time.

    ....

    This explanation will not do. Firstly, let’s say people who are poor and Black or Asian (or white in Salford) just like a good ruck. Fine. Then why riot now? The problem with this account is that it does not account for why the riots took place when and how they did. The fact of the matter is that the prime causal factor of all this rioting has been the shooting of Mark Duggan and this should not be forgotten. His poor family, have since been put through, not only his murder, but the continuing defamation of his name in the national press. First he was shooting at police (turns out he wasn’t according to their own sources), then he was on his way to kill someone (no evidence) then his uncle is supposed to have been a gangster (so what?). I am sure, I am not the only one who notices the ridiculous dance follows the same footfalls as that of de Menezes. First he had jumped over the turnstyle (but he hadn’t) then he was wearing a suspiciously padded jacket (only it was denim). In that case it turned out that a combination of murderous incompetence and the racist inability to tell two Brown people apart had lead to the mans life being taken, so forgive me if I jump to conclusions on this one.

    #UKriots

  • Scottish teens arrested for posting on Facebook | thinq_
    http://www.thinq.co.uk/2011/8/10/scottish-teens-arrested-posting-facebook

    A 16-year-old boy was arrested in the south side of Glasgow, charged with using Facebook to incite others to commit acts of disorder. And in Dundee, an 18-year-old man was arrested on similar charges. Both are due in court today.

    Police have confirmed they are glued to Facebook, searching for postings that may be connected with rioting that has burst out all over Britain, sparked by the shooting by police of Mark Duggan last Thursday.

    #UKuncut

  • From Brixton to #Tottenham, inequality lies at the heart of the riots — New Internationalist
    http://www.newint.org/blog/2011/08/08/jody-mcintyre-riots-police-tottenham-brixton

    On Thursday evening, Mark Duggan was shot dead in by police officers in Tottenham. The IPCC immediately announced they would investigate; unusual for an organisation known for its inefficiency. The media were told that a non-police issue firearm had been recovered from the scene, and that one of the police officers had been injured. Later reports revealed a bullet found lodged in a police radio.

    I received a torrent of abuse online for expressing support for the #riots. I expect Martin Luther King got the same abuse when he said “A riot is the language of the unheard” as did Bob Marley for singing “That’s why we gonna be burning and looting tonight…” .
    I’m sorry, but my solidarity does not lie with corporations making millions and their fully-insured smashed windows, it lies with human beings who lose their lives and their
    families.

    #UK

    • je poste pas le lien car je ne veut pas faire de pub mais un abruti de bloger néo con incite ses lecteurs à dénoncer @jodymcintyre à la police pour incitation à l’émeute :

      Jody McIntyre shot to fame (or notoriety) during the student riots. He garnered a lot of publicity by alleging that the police assaulted him and pushed him out of his wheelchair after he had deliberately placed himself at the front line of the riots in Westminster. Far from being just a run-of-the-mill student, though, it swiftly turned out that he was a hard core hard-left activist who was closely enough involved with the violent disorder that he was apparently part of the group who ended up on the roof of Millbank along with the fire extinguisher-thrower.

      ..........

      I’ve reported McIntyre to the Metropolitan Police for the offence of incitement to riot – you can do so too by phoning 101 to be connected to the Met’s control room, whether you report McIntyre or another instance of incitement.

      La police britannique a depuis un moment les réseaux sociaux et le web à l’œil et certain en abuse.

  • Le quartier de Tottenham se défend contre la brutalité policière
    https://www.lereveil.ch/contrib/le-quartier-de-tottenham-se-defend
    https://www.lereveil.ch/londres-grosse-emeute-a-tottenham
    « Des centaines de personnes se sont rassemblées dans les rues de #Tottenham, au nord de #Londres, après que la police a tué un habitant du nom de Mark Duggan. Des barricades ont été érigées et de nombreuses voitures de police ont été brûlées durant les protestations qui ont eu lieu jusqu’à tard dans la nuit. »
    #acab #révolte

  • Lenin’s Tomb : Tottenham calling
    http://leninology.blogspot.com/2011/08/tottenham-calling.html

    The Metropolitan Police shot dead a young man named Mark Duggan in Tottenham on Thursday. As soon as the news emerged, albeit in the rather coy presentation of the television media, it was obvious that something would kick off. The circumstances of the killing are not entirely clear. It is known that the police were from an Operation Trident unit, which deals with gun crime ’in the black community’ (because black people need extra special policing, you know). It is known that they pursued Mark Duggan while he was a passenger in a cab, stopped the cab and, during the arrest, shot him dead on the scene. From what I can gather, they seem to have pulled him out of the cab and shot him four times on the spot.

    The police seem to have let it be known that they were shot at first, and that a police officer was injured. The impression was thus given in the early media reports that they killed the young man in self-defence. Whatever the officer’s injury, he was only kept in hospital overnight. Later, the police claimed that the bullet miraculously struck the officer’s police radio which, like a bible or a piece of the true cross, absorbed the shot. They say that in the seconds following this they opened fire in self-defence. An eyewitness, however, claimed that the young man was already restrained on the ground when the shots were fired. If true, this would bear the hallmarks of an extra-legal execution. Suffice to say, anyone who takes the police’s version of events at face value at this point must either be a fool, or enjoy being made a fool of.