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Assata Shakur, black Liberation activist exiled in Cuba, dies at 78 | |
(about 11 hours later) | |
Assata Shakur, an activist with the Black Liberation Army exiled in Cuba for four decades, has died in Havana, aged 78. | Assata Shakur, an activist with the Black Liberation Army exiled in Cuba for four decades, has died in Havana, aged 78. |
Shakur, also known as Joanne Chesimard, died on Thursday of unspecified health conditions and "advanced age", Cuba's foreign affairs ministry said in a statement on Friday. | |
She had been on the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists list for years after she escaped in 1979 from a New Jersey women's prison, where she was serving a life sentence following her murder conviction in a shoot-out that killed a New Jersey state trooper and a fellow activists. | |
Shakur maintained her innocence and in 1984 reappeared in Cuba, where she was granted asylum by former President Fidel Castro. | |
Shakur was born JoAnne Deborah Byron in July 1947 in New York City and was raised between the city and Wilmington, North Carolina. She was the step-aunt and godmother of the late rapper Tupac Shakur. | Shakur was born JoAnne Deborah Byron in July 1947 in New York City and was raised between the city and Wilmington, North Carolina. She was the step-aunt and godmother of the late rapper Tupac Shakur. |
She became involved in political activism for black Americans while in college, first with the Black Panther Party, a group that favoured radical resistance to racism in the United States and developed schools and other social services for black people. | She became involved in political activism for black Americans while in college, first with the Black Panther Party, a group that favoured radical resistance to racism in the United States and developed schools and other social services for black people. |
The movement was heavily surveilled by the FBI, which considered it a threat to the US. Shakur also joined the more radical Black Liberation Army, whose membership consisted of former Black Panthers. | |
Shakur was travelling with fellow activists in 1973 when their car was stopped by New Jersey officers. A shoot-out ensued in which state trooper Werner Foerster and fellow activist Zayd Malik Shakur were killed. Assata Shakur was also injured in the shootout. | |
She was arrested and tried for Foerster's death, but denied shooting him and said her trial in front of an all-white jury was unfair. | |
She told NBC News in a 1998 interview filmed in Havana that she escaped because she was afraid for her life and that she "would never receive justice" in the US. | She told NBC News in a 1998 interview filmed in Havana that she escaped because she was afraid for her life and that she "would never receive justice" in the US. |
Her exile in Cuba was among the many thorny issues between the communist-run island and the US. | Her exile in Cuba was among the many thorny issues between the communist-run island and the US. |
Shakur was the first woman to be added to the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists list. The agency and New Jersey each offered a $1m (£746,000) reward for information leading to her arrest. | |
She was celebrated in music, with her name featuring in songs such as 1998's Rebel Without a Pause by hip-hop group Public Enemy and A Song for Assata by the rapper Common. | |
Shakur is survived by her daughter Kakuya Shakur, who wrote on Facebook: "Words cannot describe the depth of loss that I am feeling at this time." | Shakur is survived by her daughter Kakuya Shakur, who wrote on Facebook: "Words cannot describe the depth of loss that I am feeling at this time." |
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