Thousands of
prisoners in over 24 states began a labor strike on September 9, the 45th
anniversary of the Attica prison uprising, to demand better conditions and
healthcare, the right to unionize and what one organizing group calls an “end
to slavery in America.”
There are probably 20,000 prisoners on strike right now, at
least, which is the biggest prison strike in history, but the information is
really sketchy and spotty,” said Ben Turk, who works on “in-reach” to prisons
for the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee, a chapter of the Industrial
Workers of the World union helping to coordinate the inmate-led initiative from
the outside.
As the strikes began, reports emerged of several facilities
being put on lockdown, some preemptively, but the only way for outsiders to get
updates would be to call each facility and ask, usually getting no explanation
about the reasons for a lockdown. Reports also emerged claiming that prison
leaders in Virginia, Ohio, California, and South Carolina were put in solitary
confinement as a result of the strike.
At the Kinross Correctional Facility in Michigan, some 150
prisoners identified as “ringleaders” of the protests were also removed to
other facilities after prisoners assigned to kitchen work declined to report to
their jobs on September 9 and some 400 prisoners staged a peaceful protest. The
situation there grew more tense a day later when prison guards went through the
facility to remove suspected leaders, the Wall Street Journal reported, and the
prison remains on lockdown.
“What people have to realize is that these men and women
inside prison — they expected to be retaliated against, but they sacrificed,”
said Pastor Kenneth Glasgow, a former prisoner and a supporter of the Free
Alabama Movement, the prisoner-led group that first called for the nationwide
strike. “People on the outside are not understanding they are being
bamboozled,” he added, expressing disappointment that the strike hadn’t
garnered more attention. “A lot of people are not realizing the value in what’s
going on, they don’t realize that it’s slavery, that slavery still exists.”
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