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Rabu, 09 Juli 2008

Jackson Apologises to Obama

Jesse Jackson tonight issued an extraordinary apology to Barack Obama after the civil rights leader was unwittingly recorded saying he wanted to emasculate the Democratic candidate.

In a segment aired on Fox television, Jackson is pictured during a break in a recording studio last Sunday venting his frustrations at Obama.

"I want to cut his nuts off," Jackson said. "Barack, he's talking down to black people."

The clip aired at 8pm, after hours of intense speculation on the nature of Jackson's comments. Initially, news organisations hesitated to report the remarks. CNN's Wolf Blitzer said: "It's so crude we can't repeat it on the air."

Fox said after airing the segment with Jackson that there were even worse comments.

The potential damage to Obama's campaign from Jackson's attack — and the divisions they exposed between the Democratic candidate and an older generation of African-American leaders — were underlined by the speed of the clergyman's apology.

Jackson issued his apology early in the day, once he learned the segment was going to be aired, lavishly praising Obama's run for the White House.

"For any harm or hurt that this hot mic private conversation may have caused, I apologise," Jackson said. "My support for Senator Obama's campaign is wide, deep and unequivocal."

The Obama campaign said it accepted the apology. But Jesse Jackson Jr, a co-chair of the campaign, issued a blistering rebuke. Though he loved his father, he said: "I thoroughly reject and repudiate his ugly rhetoric. He should keep hope alive and any personal attacks and insults to himself."

Jackson has known Obama's wife, Michelle, for years, but the two men are not close. He made his remarks in what he thought was an off-air moment during an interview with Fox television in a Chicago studio last Sunday.

The conversation turned to Obama's recent speeches on morality in which he has said African-American men were not living up to their responsibilities as fathers.

In Jackson's view, Obama should have assigned blame to government and public policy for the breakdown of some black families.

The suggestion of a rift between Obama and African-American voters could be very damaging to a candidate who has tried to position himself beyond the racial divide.

Obama is still recovering from a controversy over his former pastor, Jeremiah Wright. The Democratic candidate is also on the defensive about his shifts in position on a host of issues, including the defining premise of his candidacy, the war in Iraq.

Obama's move to the centre has disappointed leftwing Democrats. Bloggers have accused him of betrayal, erupting in outrage at his vote yesterday in support of a bill granting legal immunity to telephone companies engaged in wiretapping without court oversight.

Obama denies he has been moving to the centre. "The people who say this apparently haven't been listening to me," he told a meeting in Atlanta.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/09/19/jackson.jena6/index.html

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Jesse Jackson: Obama needs to bring more attention to Jena 6
WASHINGTON (CNN)

The Rev. Jesse Jackson criticized Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on Tuesday over his reaction to the arrest of six black juveniles in Jena, Louisiana, on murder charges, accusing the Illinois senator of "acting like he's white," according to a South Carolina newspaper.

The comments reportedly came during a speech at Benedict College, a historically black college in Columbia, South Carolina.

The newspaper reports Jackson later said he did not recall saying Obama is "acting like he's white," but continued to condemn the Illinois Democrat as well as the other presidential candidates for not bringing more attention to this issue.

He also said Obama needs to be "bolder" in his stances if he wants to make inroads in South Carolina. Obama currently trails rival Sen. Hillary Clinton in South Carolina by 18 points, according to a recent LA Times/Bloomberg poll.

In a statement released Wednesday afternoon, Obama said his previous statments about the Jena 6 case "were carefully thought out" with input from his national campaign chairman and Jackson's son, Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr., D-Illinois.

"Outrage over an injustice like the Jena 6 isn't a matter of black and white. It's a matter of right and wrong," he said in the statement.

Jackson, who ran for president twice in the 1980s, endorsed Obama's White House bid earlier in the year. Jackson won the South Carolina Democratic primary, where African American voters play an influential role, in both presidential bids.

"If I were a candidate, I'd be all over Jena," the prominent civil rights activist said Tuesday in Columbia, South Carolina, the The State newspaper reports. "Jena is a defining moment, just like Selma was a defining moment."

In a statement released Wednesday, Jackson reaffirmed his support for Obama.

"He has remarkably transcended race, however the impact of Katrina and Jena makes America's unresolved moral dilemma of race unavoidable," he said. " I think Jena is another defining moment of the issue of race and the criminal justice system. This issue requires direct and bold leadership. I commend Sen. Obama for speaking out and demanding fairness on this defining issue. Any attempt to dilute my support for Sen. Obama will not succeed."

Tensions had simmered at Jena High School and in the small town for first three months of the 2006 school year after a black student asked the vice principal if he and some friends could sit under an oak tree where white students typically congregated.

Told by the vice principal they could sit wherever they pleased, the student and his pals sat under the sprawling branches of the shade tree in the campus courtyard.

The next day, students arrived at school to find three nooses hanging from those branches. According to The Town Talk in nearby Alexandria, the school's principal recommended expulsion for those involved in placing the nooses. Instead, the newspaper reported, a school district committee suspended three white students for three days calling the incident just a "prank."

On December 4, several students jumped a white classmate, Justin Barker, knocking him unconscious while stomping and kicking him. The charges against the six blacks -- dubbed the " Jena 6" -- resulted from that incident.

Jackson is slated to be on hand for a march in Jena this Thursday. The Rev. Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III, and hip-hop artist Mos Def are also expected to be on hand.

Obama formally released a statement on the case Friday evening after one of the teen's charges was thrown out, saying, "I am pleased that the Louisiana state appeals court recognized that the aggravated battery charge brought in this case was inappropriate."

"I hope that today's decision will lead the prosecutor to reconsider the excessive charges brought against all the teenagers in this case," he added. "And I hope that the judicial process will move deliberately to ensure that all of the defendants will receive a fair trial and equal justice under the law."

He also said in a separate statement last week, "When nooses are being hung in high schools in the 21st century, it's a tragedy. It shows that we still have a lot of work to do as a nation to heal our racial tensions. This isn't just Jena's problem; it's America's problem."

CNN Senior Political Analyst Bill Schneider said Obama is under special pressure because he is the only African-American running for president.

But Obama is not of the same generation of black leaders, such as Jackson, who came out of the civil rights moment, Schneider said.

"I think that gives him a special position," Schneider said. "He is running on his appeal -- to white voters as well as to African-American voters -- as a uniter."

"He doesn't want to be a divider in this case," Schneider said.

Meanwhile, Obama's chief rivals for the Democratic nomination, Clinton and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, have also recently condemned the Jena case.

Sen. Clinton said the controversy surrounding the "Jena 6" court case is a "teachable moment for America."

"People need to understand that we cannot let this kind of inequality and injustice happen anywhere in America," the Democratic presidential hopeful told the Rev. Al Sharpton when she called into his nationally syndicated radio program Tuesday afternoon.

At last Saturday's NAACP Freedom Fund Dinner in Charleston South Carolina, Clinton said, "There is no excuse for the way the legal system treated those young people. ... This case reminds us that the scales of justice are seriously out of balance when it comes to charging, sentencing, and punishing African-Americans."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jul/10/barackobama.uselections2008