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US Marks 40th Anniversary of King Assassination
Issue 324
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Enough Support In Both Houses Of Parliament For Bill Banning Ahmedou Abdallah From Entering Somaliland

Norwegian Firm TGS Spent $10 Million On Geophysical Surveys In Somaliland Says Minerals Ministry Official

KULMIYE’s II Conference Succeeds

Fuad A. Adde Sacked For Accusing Riyale Of Mismanaging Donations For Sool

Somaliland Local Government Re-organisation through Presidential Decrees in an Election Year

Norway To Withdraw From International Contact Group On Somalia

Ethiopian factor surfaces in Puntland oil dispute

Two Somaliland-Born Prisoners In Guantanamo Search For New Home

Politics of one belly

Divide Widens Between Insurgent Groups In Somalia

There can be another Zimbabwe without Bob

No Ethiopian soldiers in Puntland, says leader

Regional Affairs

Somaliland’s Opposition Leader Warns Against Any Delay Of Presidential Elections

Vice-President Ahmed Yusuf and delegation visit Las Anod

France Working to Save Yacht Crew

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Marks 40th Anniversary of King Assassination

Pedestrian forced at gunpoint to join bogus-cheque scam, court hears

Blaze death: Dead man became father just two weeks ago

Validating foreign policy folly

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

My 47-day ordeal at the hands of Somali pirates, by British captain held for ransom

Somaliland: Past, Present And Future

GINI, THE LOST QUEEN

Search for Khouri smoking gun is on

Socotra is precious, humanity-central Island, says study

A Generation Of Career Women

Founder member Henry Allingham on the RAF at 90

Somalia Called 'World's Most Neglected Crisis'

Food for thought

Opinions

A Message to KULMIYE 2nd Convention: Hargeysa Somaliland

She Is A Surviving Veteran

Somaliland American Council Criticizes Report By UN Official

Welcome in Lascanood, Mr Vice President

Speech By Jenny Sonesson Secretary-General Liberal Women Of Sweden At The Opening Of The KULMIYE Party’s Conference

Somalia: The Need for a Popular Culture


U.S. civil rights leader Martin Luther King speaking in London at the press conference, 21 Sep 1964
Martin Luther King, Jr., at a  London press conference, 21 Sep 1964

By Jim Malone

Washington, April 4, 2008 - marks the 40th anniversary of the assassination of the American civil rights leader Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. In the years since his death, Reverend King has often been cited as one of the most admired Americans in history. But for many, his quest for racial equality remains unfinished. VOA National Correspondent Jim Malone reports from Washington.

On the evening of April 4, 1968, reporter Joe Louw was in his motel room in Memphis, Tennessee, watching a news report about Martin Luther King, Jr.

"When the program ended I reached over to turn the set down," he said. "That was when I heard the shot ring out and I rushed out on the balcony. I saw Dr. King lying about 40 feet away. Police poured down the street running with rifles. The scene was confused and frantic. An ambulance arrived, but there was not much anyone could do. I knew they had killed him."

Later that night, Democratic Party presidential candidate Robert Kennedy broke the news to a stunned crowd in Indiana.

"Martin Luther King was shot and was killed tonight in Memphis, Tennessee," he said. "What we need in the United States is not hatred. What we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness, but is love and wisdom and compassion toward one another and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether they be white or whether they be black."

Presidential candidate Sen. Robert F. Kennedy speaks to campaign workers in Los Angeles minutes before he was shot, 05 Jun 1968

Presidential candidate Sen. Robert F. Kennedy speaks to campaign workers in Los Angeles minutes before he was shot, 05 Jun 1968

Two months later, Kennedy also became the victim of an assassin's bullet.

King's assassination set off riots in more than 100 U.S. cities and ushered in a divisive and bitter chapter in race relations in the United States.

King had gone to Memphis to support striking sanitation workers. The night before he died, King spoke to a church audience in a way that now seems eerily prophetic.

"Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place," he said. "But I am not concerned about that now. I just want to do God's will. And he has allowed me to go up to the mountain, and I have looked over and I have seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the promised land."

Forty years after his death, King's legacy of fighting for racial and economic justice remains strong.

Ron Walters is an expert on race and politics at the University of Maryland. Walters recently spoke to a group of young African-Americans at the very spot where Reverend King gave his last speech the night before he died.

"It was a moment that I will never forget because my thoughts, of course, were certainly on what he was thinking that night when he talked about the fact that he may not get to the mountaintop with us, but he has seen the possibilities of America," he said. "You know that is very much where we are trying to go in this country in race relations, to the mountaintop, and I think the impediments that keep us from getting there are the ones that we continually have to remove."

Many analysts give the United States a grade of incomplete when they assess racial progress since King's assassination.

Barack Obama

Barack Obama

African-Americans have made advances in education, business, entertainment and politics. In many ways, the rise of Democratic Party presidential contender Barack Obama is a powerful symbol of racial progress. At the same time, many black Americans remain mired in poverty and hopelessness in cities around the country.

Dedrick Muhammad has written a study called "The Unrealized American Dream" for the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington.

"It is true that Barack Obama is running for president and has a good chance to be the Democratic nominee," he said. "But it is also true that a third of black children are living in poverty today in the wealthiest nation in the world. That really should also be a major headline in the newspapers, and the sad thing is, I do not even hear that being discussed."

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., waves to supporters during his famous I Have a Dream speech in Washington, D.C., 28 Aug 1963

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., waves to supporters during his famous 'I Have a Dream' speech in Washington, DC, 28 Aug 1963

Martin Luther King is best remembered for his 1963 "I Have a Dream" speech that rallied millions in the United States and around the world to the cause of racial equality.

"I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream," he said. "I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed. We hold these truths to be self evident that all men are created equal."

Dedrick Muhammad and others hope that the 40th anniversary of Reverend King's death will bring renewed commitment and dedication to the idea of turning Martin Luther King's dream into reality.

"Coming toward greater racial equality is not an easy process, but something that requires great work, great effort and controversial measures," he said. "America really could bridge this racial divide, but for 40 years we have been wandering around and have not come to that point and I am hoping America will, maybe during this 40th anniversary, recognize it is time to fulfill King's dream, and not just remember the dreamer."

King's status as a national hero has grown in the years since his death.

The Gallup polling organization ranked Martin Luther King the second-most admired person of the 20th century, right behind Mother Teresa and just ahead of John F. Kennedy.

Source: VOA


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