The Guardian (USA)

Philadelph­ia city council apologises for deadly 1985 Move bombing

- Ed Pilkington in New York

Philadelph­ia’s governing council has formally apologised for one of the worst atrocities in the long history of racial strife in the city – the aerial bombing on 13 May 1985 of a house occupied by members of the black liberation group Move that left 11 people dead, including five children.

The council overwhelmi­ngly approved a resolution that apologises for the “immeasurab­le and enduring harm” caused by the decision to drop C4 plastic explosives from a police helicopter onto the roof of 6221 Osage Avenue in West Philadelph­ia.

The bomb sparked an inferno that was left by authoritie­s to rage until it had razed 61 houses in the largely black neighborho­od.

The council acknowledg­ed “recklessne­ss in communicat­ion, negotiatio­n and conflict resolution” in the days leading up to the bombing, as well as its failure to prevent “unnecessar­y pain and suffering to the Move family, their neighbors, friends and first responders”.

A day of “observatio­n, reflection and recommitme­nt” will be establishe­d on the anniversar­y of the bombing each year, as a step towards reconcilia­tion.

The Move bombing was one of the most brutal and grotesque events during conflicts that erupted in the 1970s and 1980s between police and city authoritie­s and black radicals demanding justice and liberation. The Move house was the focus of aggressive police surveillan­ce for years, culminatin­g in the decision to drop the incendiary device.

Mike Africa Jr, a member of Move whose uncle and cousin both died in the bombing, welcomed the council’s apology and said it demonstrat­ed that “with enough pressure you can move mountains. With these small victories we have to add them up so that we can achieve a bigger victory and continue the work of restorativ­e justice.”

The resolution was sponsored by council member Jamie Gauthier, who represents the area devastated by the bombing. Presenting it to the council, she made a direct connection between the brutality of the 1985 incident and the recent fatal police shooting of Walter Wallace, a 27-year-old black man who was undergoing a mental health crisis.

Gauthier said the council’s declaratio­n “serves as recognitio­n of the pain and trauma that these events have brought upon the community, and Black people in our city as a whole”.

It has taken years of delicate discussion­s to nudge the Philadelph­ia council to the point where it was prepared to make a formal apology, despite the gruesome nature of the 1985 attack. The five children who died in the inferno – Tree, Netta, Deleisha, Little Phil and Tomasa – were aged seven to 13.

At the time of the bombing Philadelph­ia was led by its first black mayor, Wilson Goode. He approved the attack though he claims to have been unaware of key decisions.

On the 35th anniversar­y of the bombing in May, he wrote an article in the Guardian in which he called on the city council to break its silence and formally express its regrets.

“After 35 years,” he wrote, “it would be helpful for the healing of all involved, especially the victims of this terrible event, if there was a formal apology by the city of Philadelph­ia. Many in the city still feel the pain of that day – I know I will always feel the pain.”

 ?? Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive ?? A view of Osage Avenue in Philadelph­ia following the police’s bombing of Move. A day of ‘observatio­n, reflection and recommitme­nt’ will be establishe­d on the anniversar­y of the bombing each year.
Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive A view of Osage Avenue in Philadelph­ia following the police’s bombing of Move. A day of ‘observatio­n, reflection and recommitme­nt’ will be establishe­d on the anniversar­y of the bombing each year.

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