Neighbor collect In drug ca e SAN FRANCISCo-A judge ruled that an apartment build­ ing owner in a poverty-strick­ en section of town infested with drug dealers must pay as much as $5,000 to each of 75 neighbors. The neighbors brought the suit charging the 36-unit apartment building had be­ come a public nui ance. The entrance locks and no­ trespassing signs installed by the landlord were not enough, the judge 'ruled. The landlord should h ve hired a re ident manager and installed high-. security fences for the build­ ing whichs rents to poor people under a federally sub­ sidized program. scream. MICHIGAN CITIZEN Publlah d each Sund yby New Day Enterprise 12541 Second Street P.O. Box 03560 Highland Park, MI 48203 (313) 869-0033 FAX. (313) 869-0430 BENTON HARBOR BUREAU. 175 Main Street B nton Harbor, M149022 . (616) 927-1527 FAX. (313) 927-2023 Publlaher: charles D. Kelly Editor: Teresa Kelly Managing Editor: Wanda F. Roquemore Office Aaalatant: Catherine R. Kelly Contrlbutora: Bernice Brown Salama Gordon Mary Golliday Allison Jones Flodean Riggs Leah Samuel Ron Seigel Carolyn Warfield Vera White Production Manager: Kascene Barks Production: Kai Andrich' Anita lroha Account executive: Earlene Tolliver . Marketing Executlv .: AMnClemons Nehru Johnson , I ., I w truggle of eliminating raci m, il­ literacy nd exism. I w nted to ee if th Y were j t urviving or wor - ing on developing new goal for their people. And, to ee if they h d con­ tinued in advancing their ociety politically, ocially, economically and spiritually. And they h d! MY VI IT PROVED to be a repeat of my first trip. I aw children o ,Iw imp ed by th May Day Parad I w ore million Cubans p rade down the treet with igns that po e to their pride nd dedication. There were contingen of thousands of wor ers nd military personnel on bicycles. I could feel the strength of the Cuban people. And when the people aw Fidel, they began shouting "Fidel- Fidel! Men, women and children were jumping up and down shouting Fidel - Fidel. One man brought his dog to the parade and pick him up 0 hi dog could ee and wave to Fidel. / m oft People were so passionate and emotional. This passion for Fidel • really bucks what you hear from the American pre s. WHAT I AW DURI G Y visit would help anyone to under­ stand that what we ee and h ar from Afrikan Holocaust Memorial and and Reperation Conference slated The National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in. America (N'COBRA) is sponsoring its annual National Holocaust Memorial and Reparations Conference, June 19-21, in Charleston, SC. In addi tion to the ecumenical Holocaust observance, the con­ ference will include a hi torical tour, workshops, an Afrikan/ReggaelRap Concert, and intergenerational relay. THE HOLOCAU T Memorial is held in rememberance of the Afrikans/Blacks murdered in the Middle Passage, being brought to the Americas for enslavement. The Afrikan Holocaust was the sys­ . ternatic, intentional, and industrial­ ized murder of Black Children, women and men of all ages. TOWARD CLAIMING and understanding our history and our entitlement to reparations, ctivitie will begin with a tour ofhi torie ite with emphasis on importation, en lavernent, and resistance. The tour will be followed by working group on trategies to win repara­ tions, with a luncheon keynoted by Aminifu Harvey, "From Conscious­ ness to Successful Action." N'COBRA IS A coalition of in­ dividuals and organizations com­ mitted to fighting for reparations, compensation and payment due to Black people in North "America for enslavement as well as other human rights violations since its abolition. N'COBRA is headquartered in Washington, D.C. and Co-chaired by Vincent Godwin and Adjoa Aiyetoro. The mailing address is P.O. Box 62622, Washington, D.C. 20029-2622,202-635-6272. Move member released from prison. By TED DUNCOMBE PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The woman who survived the police bombing of the headquarters of the back-to-nature group MOVE left prison in a limousine recently, seven years after the deadly attack that destroyed a neighborhood. Ramona Africa, 37, was released from the State Correctional institu­ tion at Muncy. Africa, who refused -parole for 5 1(1. years because offi­ cials wanted her to renounce the group as a condition, vowed to seek freedom for other MOVE members. "RAMONA IS NOT the issue," she said on a radio talk show after returning to Philadelphia. "Ramona is one person, one member of this organization. We are an organization that is committed to bringing our family out of prison." About a dozen MOVE members remain behind bars, most for a 1978 confrontation that left a Philadelphia police officer dead. At an afternoon news conference, Africa said the group soon would reveal documents that prove their innocence. "All MOVE has ever asked for, all we are asking for now, is one serious, in-depth, honest investiga­ tion into what we are saying about our family,'" she told a news con­ ference. About 60 people attended an evening memorial service, spon­ sored by a group called the Lessons from the MOVE Tragedy Commit­ tee. "THERE CAN BE no peace until there is justice," aid the Rev. Roscoe Cooper Jr., pastor of the 5th Street Baptist Church of Richmond, Va. Members of MOVE, which isn't an acronym, championed back-to­ nature rituals, refused to send their children to school and openly dis­ obeyed health and safety laws. All took the surname Africa, after the group's founder, John Africa. Complaints by neighbors about noise and unsanitary conditions led police to try to evict the group on HAil MOVE has ever asked for, all we are asking for now, is one serious, in-depth, honest . investiga�ion into what we are saying about our family," May 13, 1985, and a gunbattle en­ sued. Police dropped a bomb on the group's row house, etting off a fire that killed 11 people, including John Africa, and destroyed 61 hom . "FIVE INNOCENT BABIES were burned alive," Ramona Africa said Wednesday. "Six innocent adults were burned alive. And the persecution of MOVE continued with unjust parole stipulations." The attack left deep scars in the nation's fifth-largest city. It under­ mined the promising career of the city's first Black mayor, W. Wilson Goode, and resulted in sweeping' changes in the police department. Two grand jury investigations resulted in no charges against offi­ cials, despite a commission report that accused Goode and his top ad­ ministrators of "reckless disregard for life and property." MOVE MEMBERS who weren't at the headquarters that day now live in a different Philadelphia neighborhood in two houses bought with proceeds from legal settlements with the city. Neighbors say the group hasn't caused any problems. Africa was sentenced April 14, 1986, to seven years in prison on riot and conspiracy charges. She could have been freed after five months, but she opted to serve the entire seven years to avoid constraints on her activities. the American press about Cuba i propaganda. That' why I tell thi story and encourage people to e for themselves, to experience what I saw and what I felt. My decision to return to Cuba prove to be a correct one. The people were still proud, united and strug- gling to express there independent, th ir autonomy. Our government must allow Americans to travel freely to Cub , o that they may ee for themselves what I aw. We need a policy of "Hand off Cuba". We need to let the Rights leaders call L.A. 'The future of America' '. Ten national civil rights leaders recently warned that the Rodney King verdict and the tragic disturban­ ces that followed would be repeated unless major changes were made in national policy. Among tho e issuing the state­ ment were Julius L. Chambers, Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund; the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, former presidential candidate and Shadow Senator for the District of Columbia; and Dr. Joseph E. Lowery, President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The joint statement pointed out that President Bush's original response to the King verdict was to declare "The court system has worked," a position he abandoned only when the verdict proved un­ popular. The leaders observed that the President had at long last expressed an interest in domestic issues such as poverty and urban decay, but asked "Why did dozens have to die, why did thousands' of buildings have to be des troyed, to ge t the Administration's attention?" . . Bush endangers Haitians MlAMI (AP) - President Bush's order to return Haitian boat people without letting them make a case for political asylum is essentially a death sentence for some, refugee lawyers told the Miami Herald. "We have a refugee emergency in our own back yard and we have closed our doors," said Bill Frelick, senior policy analyst for the U.S. Committee for Refugees, a private advocacy group. "It's a dangerous and frightening precedent" Bush acted after the tent cities at Guantanamo reached their capacity last week, saying his intent was to discourage Haitians from daring the risky voyage to this country, which they often do in dangerously over­ crowded boats. The executive order issued May 24 compel Co as t Guard crew to head straight to Haiti with any boat people intercepted at sea. Those wishing to apply for asylum are directed to the U.S. Em- bassy in Port-au-Prince. But a visit there would be dangerous, some advocates told the newspaper. � "If you walk into the embassy, you're marking yourself as an op­ ponent of the military and the de facto government," said Bill O'­ Neill, deputy director for the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights in ew York. "People are identifying themselves as op­ ponents." Further, there isn't sufficient staff at the embassy to process thousands of time-consuming claims, advocates aid. "It's a sham," said lawyer Robert Juceam of ew York. He and other refugee attorney maintain Bush's order represents a breach of the 1967 United Nations Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees. It guarantee refugees will not be returned to a land where their lives or freedom would be at risk. The protocol doesn't apply to the Haitian boat people, the Bush ad­ ministration claims, because they haven't reached U.S. soil. Since Haiti's first freely-elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was ousted in a coup last Sept 30, more than 34,000 Haitians have left home by boat. About 14,000 have been sent back to Haiti, 12,500 are in refugee camps on the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and the rest are pursuing asylum claims in the United States. U.S. officials have estimated one in four Hai tians is leaving for politi­ cal reasons, the Herald reported. Meanwhile, on Monday, the Coast Guard announced it had imple­ mented Bush's order but bad s�tted no Haitian boats since.