Protesters disrupt Art Basel and shut down highway over police abuse
Protesters in Miami joined others around the country to march against police brutality and particularly the deaths of Israel Hernandez, Michael Brown and Eric Garner.
Miami really lives up to its good-time reputation each year at Art Basel Miami Beach — basically a huge party with some expensive art thrown in. What started as an art collector’s dream has morphed into the biggest beach party weekend of the year.
But on Friday things got real when a large group of activists staged a protest in the center of the Wynwood Arts District against police brutality. From that starting point, they marched onto I-195, a major highway bridging the cities of Miami and Miami Beach.
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“This is a week when people come from around the country to Miami and believe that myth—that it’s beautiful, that [the city doesn’t] suffer from the same problems that New York and Chicago and L.A. do because we have palm trees and it’s warm all year,” said Phillip Agnew of the Dream Defenders, one of the groups behind the protest. “This is a city and this is a police force in Miami Beach and Miami-Dade that murders, that profiles, that beats, that harasses and stops and frisks.” The issue of unarmed minorities getting killed by police officers has a particular resonance here. Last year, teenage artist Israel Hernanadez was fatally Tasered by Miami Beach police after being apprehended for tagging an abandoned McDonald’s. The incident sparked public outrage and calls for charges to be brought against the officer. But similar to the recent Mike Brown and Eric Garner cases, no charges were filed. Hernandez was the subject of a Fusion documentary, ‘Tasered.’“It’s not a just problem in Ferguson or New York, this happens in Miami, too!” said organizer Sherika Shaw with the Dream Defenders. “Israel Hernandez was from the art community here, and if he were still alive he would support us doing this during Art Basel. It was probably one of his dreams to be part of Art Basel, but that will never happen now. That’s why we’re here.”
In part in tribute to artist Hernandez, and in keeping with the week’s theme, protest organizers brought in a visual art element to the proceedings. Some hoisted flags by New York artist Kenneth Pietrobono, reading key words like “brutality.”