The parents of Michael Brown, the unarmed teen who was fatally shot this summer by a veteran police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, are bringing the story of how their son was killed to the international stage.
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Appearing as part of a delegation of human rights advocates and organizations, Brown’s parents, Lesley McSpadden and Michael Brown Sr., are meeting at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, this week to testify on police violence in the United States.
“The family and I will work to ensure no other family will experience what we have” – Michael Brown Sr. #FergusonToGeneva #WCGtoGeneva
— We Charge Genocide (@ChiCopWatch) November 11, 2014
In a session Tuesday with the United Nations Committee Against Torture, Brown’s parents, along with activists from Ferguson to Chicago, argued that cases of police brutality throughout the U.S. amount to human rights violations.
“If you look at the amount of people who are victimized by police, they tend to be disproportionately people of color,” Ejim Dike, executive director of the U.S. Human Rights Network, told msnbc. “The treatment of black and brown people is happening all over. We just happened to see it flare up in Ferguson.”
Dike’s group organized the delegation of more than 70 representatives to travel to Geneva to raise an array of U.S. issues beyond police violence, including national security, deportation policies, military sexual assault and the U.S. detention center at Guantánamo Bay. The groups are convening as the UN committee reviews the U.S. federal government’s compliance with the Convention Against Torture, an international treaty outlined to prevent torture or cruel punishment throughout the world.
“Their testimony humanized the issue,” Dike aid. “It really helped reach the hearts and minds of the committee members. We saw a strong recommendation on police violence, and we also saw the international community condemn it.”
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A coalition of organizations and attorneys representing the Brown family submitted a 13-page brief to the UN committee, raising concerns about how local officials handled the investigation into the Brown’s death and how protesters were impacted by the aggressive police response in the aftermath. “The killing of Mike Brown and the abandonment of his body in the middle of a neighborhood street is but an example of the utter lack of regard for, and indeed dehumanization of, black lives by law enforcement personnel,” the groups wrote in the brief.
Brown’s parents are set to present the brief to the UN committee Wednesday and Thursday, alongside activists who became leaders in the protests following the teen’s death, human rights attorneys from St. Louis and a delegation of young activists from Chicago. Dike said organizers hope that seeing Brown’s parents in person will have a strong impact on the UN committee. In the past, the U.S. Human Rights Network invited the parents of two high-profile slain teens, Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis, to speak before UN on racial profiling.









