Thousands of people marched to the Justice Department in Washington, on Friday,
asking the government to take stronger action against racially motivated
crimes. The demonstration was organized by the civil rights leaders after a
series of racially charged incidents.
They drew attention to charges against six black teenagers
accused of beating a white student at a high school in Jena, Louisiana.
The fight started after several white students hung nooses from a tree in front
of the school.
The protestors demanded that the federal government
intervene in the case and investigate the hanging of a noose at the school, a
symbolic historic reference to the lynchings of blacks that took place in
southern states in the early days of the civil rights movement.
“When
you hang up a noose, that's no joke to us. Our granddaddies swung on those
nooses. Every noose that's hung should be prosecuted by law,” a well known
civil rights campaigner Rev. Al Sharpton told the crowd in Washington, explaining the emotional impact
a noose hanging has among black people.
After the incident, no white student was charged. The
charges against the black students were later reduced. On the other hand prosecutors
say that no charges were brought in the Jena
schools because the suspects were minors.
The blacks marching along Pennsylvania Avenue also asked for fair
treatment from the justice system that locks up more blacks than whites. One in
three black men is likely to spend time in prison, compared to one in 17 white
men, according to Justice Department statistics.
“And look behind you all the way to the end of the plaza.
From all over this country, we're here. The Justice Department wouldn't come to
the people, we brought the people to the Justice Department," Rev Sharpton
said.
US Attorney General Michael Mukasey, who began his first
full day on the job Friday, said the Justice Department was investigating the
series of hate crimes. "These symbols of hate have no place in our great
county," he said in a statement.
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