Caribbean American legislators have expressed profound outrage over the mass shooting in Buffalo, an upstate New York city bordering Canada, by a teenage white assailant who systematically shot and killed ten people and injured three others, almost all of them Black, at a supermarket.
It’s reported that 18-year-old Payton S. Gendron was enthralled by a white supremacist ideology known as replacement theory.
Law enforcement authorities said Gendron, of Conklin, a small town in New York’s rural Southern Tier, drove over 200 miles to launch the massacre, described as one of the deadliest racist massacres in recent American history. Police said he live-streamed the attack at a Tops Friendly Markets supermarket.
“This was a purely evil act by a racist extremist, and I am deeply heartbroken and saddened by this senseless act of cowardly violence committed against unsuspecting shoppers,” Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants, told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC). “My heart goes out to all the victims and the families affected by this horrific tragedy.
“Beyond condolences and outrage, it’s clear America needs a national strategy to combat domestic terrorism once and for all,” added Clarke, who represents the predominantly Caribbean 9th Congressional District in Brooklyn, New York. “Sadly, this is not a phenomenon. Black communities across our nation continue to be under threat of domestic terrorism and racist extremists.
“Racism has had a long and brutal history inflicting wrenching pain and generational trauma on our bodies since the birth of our nation – from lynchings, Jim Crow policies, to the burning of Black Wall Street and Dylann Roof calmy gunning down Black worshipers praying in church,” she continued. “Black people continue to endure these vicious racist attacks on our humanity, our culture, and our civil rights. Enough is enough.”
The congresswoman said “the time has come to confront this incessant hatred with the same determination it has in dehumanizing Black people and other marginalized groups.
“We must come together as a nation to address this level of violence and the factors that lead up to it and stop it for good,” Clarke urged. “This must be a mission that unites all Americans, because racism threatens our public safety and corrodes our democracy.”
New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, the son of Grenadians, who will next month contest the Democratic Primary for Governor of New York, described the massacre as “senseless,” adding that “no answers will suffice in the face of the inexplicable.”
He noted that the Atlanta, Georgia-based US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced last week that 45,000 people were killed by gun violence in 2020, “a tragic record and an indictment of our failures on all levels of government to combat this crisis and save lives.
“The threat of gun violence in our subways, our supermarkets, on our streets, will continue until we can finally, meaningfully, address both the systems that enable individuals to perpetrate senseless violence and the weapons that enable such suffering,” Williams told CMC.
Brooklyn Democratic Party Chair Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, said: “We grieve with the families of this terrible mass shooting.
“The shock and horror of this never gets easier to bear, no matter how many times we’re forced to go through it,” Bichotte Hermelyn, who represents the 42nd New York State Assembly District in Brooklyn. “The people of Buffalo, indeed everyone in America, need more than just ‘thoughts and prayers;’ we need action.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul, who is from Buffalo, told a press conference on Saturday: “This is my community. I know this community well; I’ve walked these streets. I know the individuals who live here. It’s a wonderful tight-knit neighborhood.
“And to see that sense of security shattered by an individual, a white supremacist who has engaged in an act of terrorism and will be prosecuted as such, it strikes us in our very hearts to know that there is such evil that lurks out there,” she added.
At his arraignment on Saturday, Gendron pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.
Prosecutors said he faces life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The US Department of Justice Saturday night released a statement from Attorney General Merrick B. Garland.
“Tonight, the country mourns the victims of a senseless, horrific shooting in Buffalo, New York,” he said, stating that the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) are working closely with the Buffalo Police Department and federal, state, and local law enforcement partners on the matter.
Garland added that the Justice Department is investigating this matter as “a hate crime and an act of racially motivated violent extremism.
“The Justice Department is committed to conducting a thorough and expeditious investigation into this shooting and to seeking justice for these innocent victims,” he continued.
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