Chicago Sun-Times

Prisoners on strike to protest ‘modern-day slavery’

-

Prison inmates nationwide plan to put pressure on the country’s penal system by going on a two-week strike that began Tuesday.

The strike was timed to begin on the anniversar­y of the killing of jailed AfricanAme­rican activist and inmate George Jackson. He was killed by a guard in 1971 after taking guards and two inmates hostage in a bid to escape from San Quentin State Prison in California.

The final day of the strike — Sept. 9 — also carries symbolism. That’s the day in 1971 that the Attica Prison riots in New York began, eventually leaving over 40 people dead when police stormed in to retake the facility.

Prisoners leading the protests say the strike is aimed at ending what they call “modern-day slavery.” Inmates complain they are paid pennies on the dollar per hour for labor.

The event is spearheade­d by Jailhouse Lawyers Speak, a network of imprisoned prisoner rights advocates based out of Lee Correction­al Institutio­n in South Carolina and supported by the Incarcerat­ed Workers Organizing Committee, a prisoner-led trade group.

Inmates plan to abstain from reporting to their assigned jobs, halt commissary spending, hold peaceful sit-in protests and refuse to eat during the strike.

“Prisoner participat­ion depends on their location and privilege status,” said Amani Sawari, a prison reform activist and spokespers­on for the strike. “If inmates are working, they can suffocate the prison industrial complex by reducing their spending. In some detention facilities, prisoners may not be working so they might do a sit-in. It all depends.” Prisons in at least 17 states are expected to participat­e, according to Sawari, with a majority of them located in the South and West Coast.

Experts say that there is a chance that the protest may drive change in some detention centers.

“If the strike is widespread enough, it could be effective,” said Lea Johnson, Professor of Law at the University of Florida Levin College of Law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States