Arab Times

Lives ruined by violence

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WASHINGTON, Feb 27, (Agencies): In 1998, Ismael Watkins was walking down a street when a bullet hit him in the neck. He never took another step.

Today, the 33-year-old relies on a wheelchair to get around and still remembers those life-changing moments as if they had happened yesterday.

“I heard the shot, it hit my neck, another grazed my neck,” Watkins told AFP, sharing how, at age 18, he had just become a father when his fate took a turn for the worse.

Watkins’ story is by no means unique. Every year, hundreds of young African Americans are wounded or killed by weapons in the United States.

According to a 2012 report by the Children’s Defense Fund, gun homicide was the leading cause of death for young blacks aged 15 to 19 and they were eight times as likely to be victims than their white counterpar­ts.

Since 1979, 44,038 black children and teenagers were killed by guns, nearly 13 times more than the number of recorded lynchings of blacks of all ages from 1882 to 1968, according to the group.

Recently, the fatal shooting of a young African American girl in Chicago just days after she performed at President Barack Obama’s January inaugurati­on put a particular­ly poignant face on the issue, further fueling a political debate about how best to reduce arms-related killings in the United States. CHICAGO: A former Illinois legislator who favors an assault weapons ban captured the Democratic nomination in the race to replace disgraced ex-US Rep Jesse Jackson Jr., after a campaign dominated by gun-control issues in the wake of the Connecticu­t elementary school massacre.

Ex-state Rep. Robin Kelly’s nomination in Tuesday’s primary all but assures that she’ll sail through the April 9 general election and head to Washington, because the heavily minority Chicago-area district is overwhelmi­ngly Democratic.

Meetings

Watkins gains strength by attending support group meetings every Tuesday at Washington’s MedStar National Rehabilita­tion Hospital.

Others in the Urban Re-Entry Group — all “individual­s with violently acquired disabiliti­es” — have similar stories to tell.

Among them is Kwame Dew, 38, who was leaving a club one night 13 years ago when he was gunned down.

“All I remember is... (I) blanked out, then I’m in a hospital, couldn’t talk, could do nothing,” he said.

Corie Davis meanwhile became a quadripleg­ic when, on Aug 30, 1999, a stranger lodged a bullet in his neck.

“I actually don’t know the person who shot me,” said the now 33-year-old. “I have always thought I was at the wrong place at the wrong time.”

To David Cole, a law professor at Georgetown University, the plight of people like Watkins and his fellow support group members sheds light on the true face of gun violence in America, where the constituti­on guarantees everyone the right to bear arms.

While the focus of the public is on mass shootings such as the December massacre at a Connecticu­t elementary school that claimed 26 lives, in addition to those of the gunman and his mother, “that’s not the reality of gun violence in the United States,” Cole said. “The reality is concentrat­ed in the inner cities, among the poor, and the victims are overwhelmi­ngly young black men and Hispanics,” he said. “The reality of the right to bear arms in the United States is a young black kid scared with a gun in a back alley shooting at another young black kid (who is) equally scared.”

The statistics speak for themselves.

According to a 1980 to 2008 trend analysis by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, blacks were disproport­ionately represente­d among homicide victims and offenders: They were six times more likely than whites to be homicide victims and seven times more likely than whites to commit homicide.

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