For Immediate Release
Jan. 28, 2023
Black Southern Women’s Collaborative Member in Memphis: We Will Not Go Back to the Same Oppressive Systems. We Will Move, March, Protest, Organize, Power Build, and Strategize Until Demands Are Met
MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Today, Tameka Greer, executive director of Memphis Artists for Change (MAC) and a member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative (BSWC), vowed that activists will continue organizing, mobilizing, and strategizing until communities are free from oppressive systems that harm. Greer released the following statement on behalf of MAC and the BSWC:
“Last night community organizers, community activists, community members and concerned people of the city of Memphis, not only honored the wishes of Tyre Nichols’ parents and family, but we also stood in alignment and solidarity with them. Our greatest hope is that this message is heard loud and clear: We will not stop, and we will not go back to business as usual. We will not return to the same oppressive systems that have continually hurt our community. The family made demands and the community has made demands. We will move, march, protest, organize, power build, and strategize until those demands are met.”
The family’s demands include:
- Releasing body cam footage,
- Charging the officers,
- Naming all officers and public personnel on the scene the night Tyre Nichols was brutally beat, and
- Releasing the files of the officers involved.
The community’s demands include:
- Passing the Data Transparency ordinance,
- Ending the use of pre-textual traffic stops,
- Ending the use of unmarked cars and plainclothes officers,
- Dissolving the SCORPION, OCU and MGU and other task forces, and
- Removing police from traffic enforcement entirely.
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