New York Daily News

AFRIKA IS A ‘PERVERT’

Rapper’s house the ‘most fun’ – & ‘worst place’ Celebs galore, but boy sex abuse: vic

- BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE

AFRIKA BAMBAATAA was not just a hip-hop star when Hassan Campbell began hanging out at his Bronx apartment during the late 1980s — he was also a father figure.

When Campbell was hungry, Bambaataa gave him a meal. When Campbell needed a place to stay because of troubles at home, Bambaataa gave him a bed. When Campbell needed money, Bambaataa gave him cash.

“He had the most fun house in the world,” recalled Campbell, 39. “There were celebritie­s there, musicians, neighborho­od heroes. It was the best place to be — and the worst place to be.”

It was the worst place to be because Bambaataa sexually abused him numerous times when he was 12 and 13 years old, Campbell told the Daily News.

“He is a pervert,” Campbell added. “He likes little boys.”

Campbell and several other men told The News last week that they were sexually abused by Bambaataa, the South Bronx hip-hop pioneer whose 1982 hit “Planet Rock” helped turn rap music into an internatio­nal phenomenon.

The men stepped forward after The News published a story last Sunday about former music industry executive and Democratic Party activist Ronald Savage, who claims Bambaataa, now 58, abused him at least five times in 1980, inflicting deep emotional wounds.

“I know what Ronald Savage is saying is true because he did it to me,” said a 50-year-old New York man who requested anonymity. “I have never spoken to anybody about this, and when I did, I said ‘Holy s--t, they finally caught up to him.’ ”

Savage is happy others are willing to back his claims. He said he wants to keep talking about his experience­s to pressure state lawmakers to reform New York’s statute of limitation­s in sex abuse cases, which bars child victims from pursuing criminal charges or civil litigation after their 23rd birthday.

Savage says he supports the Child Victim Act, a bill from Assemblywo­man Margaret Markey (D-Queens) that would eliminate the statute of limitation­s in sexual abuse cases and open up a one-year window for older victims to pursue litigation. He also supports a bill sponsored by state Senate Minority Leader Andrea StewartCou­sins (D-Yonkers) and Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan) that would also remove the 90-day window required to file a notice of claim — the first step in a lawsuit — against a public or government entity. The Catholic Church has long argued that the 90-day requiremen­t for public entities was unfair to private institutio­ns.

“The right thing to do is come out and take care of the statute of limitation­s,” Savage said.

Bambaataa’s attorney Vivian Kimi Tozaki did not return requests for comment on the new allegation­s, but she sharply denied Savage’s account in a statement issued last week.

Zulu Nation, the internatio­nal hip-hop organizati­on Bambaataa founded in the 1970s, has repeatedly denied the claims against Bambaataa. The group rebutted the accusation­s, including a bizarre denial that claims the sexual abuse allegation­s are part of a United States government plot to discredit and destroy the organizati­on.

But a 51-year-old former New Yorker named Troy, who asked that his last name not be used in this story, told The News Bambaataa abused him, too.

“I still have a lot of anger about this,” said Troy, who lives in North Carolina. “I’ve been dealing with this for years. It’s a shame this didn’t come out earlier.”

Campbell and Bambaataa’s other accusers all say the music star showed them pornograph­ic pictures or videos and then performed oral sex on them.

“He showed me a book with a picture of a penis and said, ‘You don’t have to be gay for me to suck your d--k,’ ” Troy said.

Campbell says he remained close to Bambaataa years after the abuse stopped. Bambaataa sent him books and put money in his commissary account when he was incarcerat­ed for three years on an assault charge.

“He was a big part of my life,” says Campbell, known on the street as “Poppy.”

Campbell posted an angry video several months ago accusing Bambaataa of sexual abuse, but he said he took the video down after Bambaataa and Zulu Nation officials agreed to meet with him.

Campbell said Bambaataa acknowledg­ed the abuse and apologized to him at that meeting. The hip-hop pioneer promised he would get counseling, open up a center for troubled youth and step down from the Zulu Nation.

“He never did any of those things,” Campbell said. “He’s a manipulato­r and a liar. He’s just waiting for this chaos to blow over so he can go back to his dark, dingy hole and go back to his old ways. He needs to put down the candy and let the little boys go.”

Zulu Nation, meanwhile, called Campbell “both a liar and a government-paid police informant.”

Star, the former Hot 97 and Power 105 DJ who has posted interviews with Campbell and Troy on his YouTube channel, said his audience was originally split on Savage’s allegation­s. But the tide has turned, he said.

“People are taking this very seriously,” Star said. “Zulu Nation needs to demand that Afrika Bambaataa step down. If you believe black lives really matter, you have to stand up to this.”

 ??  ?? Hassan Campbell (in Yankees cap) has joined Ronald Savage (shown now and at 14) in accusing hip-hop star Afrika Bambaataa (far right and inset performing at Webster Hall this month) of sexual abuse in their youth. Bambaataa “likes little boys,” Campbell said, adding that he was victimized at 12 and 13.
Hassan Campbell (in Yankees cap) has joined Ronald Savage (shown now and at 14) in accusing hip-hop star Afrika Bambaataa (far right and inset performing at Webster Hall this month) of sexual abuse in their youth. Bambaataa “likes little boys,” Campbell said, adding that he was victimized at 12 and 13.
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