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<font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=3>For Immediate Release – July
18, 2011<br><br>
</font><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=4><b>Hunger Strike Rally
at CDCR Headquarters<br><br>
</b>With Strike in Third Week, CDCR Continues to Reject Prisoner
Demands<br><br>
</font><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=3><b>Press Contact: Jay
Donahue<br>
Office: <a href="tel:510-444-0484">510-444-0484</a><br><br>
</font><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=5>CDCR Headquarters, 1515
S St, Sacramento<br>
Monday July 18th, 2011, 1pm<br><br>
</b></font><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=3>Oakland –
Prisoners’ families and community members will gather at 1pm today
outside the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
(CDCR) headquarters in Sacramento to rally in support of prisoners on
hunger strike at Pelican Bay State Prison. Last week the leaders of the
strike decided to continue striking because the CDCR failed to address
any of their five core demands during negotiations. The strike, now in
its third week, is reaching a critical point with reports of dozens of
striking prisoners being taken to the infirmary because of irregular
heartbeats or fainting. Most prisoners have lost 20-35 pounds.
“What’s most troubling is that the CDCR has not offered anything
substantial in response to the prisoner’s demands, which include an end
to long term solitary confinement,” says Carol Strickman, a lawyer with
Legal Services for Prisoners with Children and member of the Prisoner
Hunger Strike Solidarity legal team. Strickman also notes, “Some of
these guys have been in the Security Housing Unit (SHU) for 20 years or
more and are suffering the severe affects of being locked in a 6 x 10
concrete cell for 23 ½ hours a day. What they are asking for are basic
human rights.”<br><br>
At least 400 prisoners at Pelican Bay continue to refuse food and
thousands more around the state are striking in solidarity, including CCI
Tehachapi, Corcoran, Centinela, Calipatria, RJ Donovan, San Quentin,
Valley State Prison for Women, and Folsom, making it the largest hunger
strike in the history of the embattled California prison system. The
system, under federal receivership, has been court ordered to release
33,000 prisoners because of medical neglect caused by severe
overcrowding. “We are urging our state representatives and Governor Brown
to step in and force the CDCR to recognize the prisoners’ demands,” says
Manuel LaFontaine, an organizer with All of Us or None, “The California
prison system is already responsible for prisoner deaths because it
provides substandard medical care. California’s lawmakers need to step up
and take action against the situation at Pelican Bay.” <br><br>
Mediators and lawyers who have spoken with hunger strikers at Pelican Bay
say they remain committed despite having not eaten for 18 days. Some have
said they are willing to strike to the death unless their demands are
met. Dorsey Nunn, a member of the mediation team points out, “The hunger
strikers believe that this is the only way they can get the CDCR to
rectify the conditions they are experiencing in the SHU. They believe
they have no other recourse.”<br><br>
Supporters of the strikers will continue to hold rallies and events to
highlight the situation at Pelican Bay and to show solidarity with the
prisoners. For more information and regular updates, visit
<a href="http://prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/">
prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com</a>.<br><br>
<br>
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