Uhuru Movement

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Group.png Uhuru Movement  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
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The Uhuru Movement is an American-based socialist and African internationalist movement founded in 1972 and led by the African People's Socialist Party (APSP), whose chairman is Omali Yeshitela. It is centred on the theory of African internationalism, which it says provides a historical materialist explanation for the social and economic conditions of African people worldwide.[1]

Evolution

The Uhuru Movement's political theory is African internationalism, which states that capitalism was born parasitic through the attack on Africa and its people. African Internationalism holds that capitalism is imperialism developed to its highest stage, not the other way around, as propounded by Vladimir Lenin.[2]

This belief derives from Karl Marx's 1867 book Capital, in which Marx wrote of the condition essential to the emergence of capitalism which he called the "primitive accumulation" of capital. African Internationalism is not a static theory that only refers to past conditions, it refers also to the conditions that African people are faced with today. It refers to African people who live inside what it views as imperialist centres, such as the United States and Europe, as an "internal (or domestic) colony". The Uhuru Movement has called for the release of all African prisoners in US prisons, described as "concentration camps", and has described US police forces as an "illegitimate standing army". They have called for the withdrawal of police forces from exploited and oppressed African American communities.[3]

Russian connection

The Uhuru Movement has been accused by state prosecutors of collaborating with alleged Russian foreign agent Aleksandr Viktorovich Ionov to sow social divisions in the United States.[4] Members of the group have travelled to St Petersburg, Russia, to attend an anti-globalisation conference, and the group has also acknowledged that it supports Russia in its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

On 19 July 2022, the Uhuru House in St Petersburg, Florida, was raided by the FBI due to an indictment by a Grand Jury alleging a conspiracy between Aleksandr Ionov and the Uhuru Movement to spread Russian disinformation under the guise of domestic political movements. An FBI Tampa special agent said that "The facts and circumstances surrounding this indictment are some of the most egregious and blatant violations we've seen by the Russian government in order to destabilise and undermine trust in American Democracy."[5]

On 23 December 2022, the Uhuru Movement organised an emergency meeting via Zoom, stating that the APSP expected new indictments by the FBI and the US Department of Justice "in early January 2023 and possibly sooner", for violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act.

Federal indictment

A federal indictment from April 2023 charged members of the St Petersburg-based Uhuru Movement, which operates as the African People's Socialist Party's activist arm, of working on behalf of the Russian government in a campaign to "sow discord, spread pro-Russian propaganda and influence local elections."

Omali Yeshitela, the Uhurus' leader and the chairperson of the APSP, Penny Joanne Hess, Jesse Nevel and former Uhuru member Augustus C. Romain Jr, known as Gazi Kodzo, are among the defendants.[6]

Arrested under fake charges

On 20 April 2023, Omali Yeshitela denounced the arrest of APSP leaders under fake charges of acting for Russia.[7]


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References


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