End the Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange (GILEE) Program

I wrote this in September 2019, but I am reposting it because it is important to understand what GILLEE is and the connection between GILEE and Cop City.

Once upon a time, long ago, in a City too busy to hate, police officers did not look like militarized Marine units going into war to fight a foreign enemy. 

Those days are gone since Dr. Robert Fiedmann, professor of Criminology at Georgia State University (GSU), founded the controversial Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange (GILEE) program in 1992 to train police officers in foreign countries.

With GILEE, we have militarized the police and trained them in foreign countries to control civilian populations and to see them as the enemy.  

Recently, a coalition of civil and human rights organizations consisting of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), Jewish Voice for Peace/Atlanta (JVP), Project South, and Black Lives Matter (BLM) held a town hall forum on GILEE at the Atlanta University Center.  

This coalition sent a letter to Mayor Keisha Lance  Bottoms asking her to suspend the City of Atlant’s participation in GILEE and to meet with the community because GILEE has a history of enabling police brutality, anti-Muslim bigotry, racism, and rightwing political extremism.    

2019 GILEE Letter_final.pdf

Fifty-seven civil and human rights groups signed the letter to Mayor Bottoms, plus many more faith leaders, scholars, and individuals. 

The letter states that GILEE partners with foreign governments that use their law enforcement agencies to restrict civil liberties, commit human rights violations, and promote bigotry, sexism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, and Islamophobia. 

The GILEE program arranged for police training with Israel’s apartheid government, and it quickly expanded to include other governments that violate human rights, including China, Colombia, Egypt, Hungary, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan. 

“The police in some of those countries open fire on protesters, torture dissidents locked in concentration camps, police officers come back with internalized Islamophobia, and this is who is training our police,”  Edward Ahmed Mitchell, Executive Director, Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), said at the town hall meeting. 

By allowing Atlanta police officers to train with foreign governments that violate human rights, we run the risk of those officers learning dangerous policing methods and bringing those methods back home and applying them to the residents of Atlanta, the letter to Mayor Bottoms states. 

“Fifty years after Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip, it controls these areas through repression, institutionalized discrimination, and systematic abuses of the Palestinian populations’ rights,” according to Human Rights Watch.

Anna Simonton wrote a deep dive into GILEE for Mondoweiss a few years ago and exposed GILLE’s rabid brand of Zionism and secrecy surrounding their private funding.

In 2008, during the Christmas holidays, Israel launched Operation Cast Lead, which devastated Gaza with over 1,400 dead, including 313 children and more than 5,500 wounded, and most of the casualties were civilians.  Israel had 13 soldiers killed.  

In that operation, Israeli bombs destroyed schools, hospitals, mosques, homes and destroyed Gaza’s infrastructure, including electricity, water, sewer, and roads, leaving Gaza in shambles.  Israel also fired white phosphorus shells on civilians, causing deadly burns down to the bone. Human Rights Watch called that a war crime.

After Operation Cast Lead, Atlanta mobilized over one thousand people in support of Palestine’s human rights and marched against Israel’s violent aggression against a defenseless civilian population.

In 2009, the Movement to End Israeli Apartheid in Georgia (MEIAG) was formed by Muslin, Palestinians, blacks, and other activists.  MEIAG and GSU students requested information on GILEE through open records to determine how the program impacts policing in the U.S.

Their request was denied.  Attorney General Sam Olens introduced revisions to Georgia’s Open Records Act to include new exemptions that covered some of the information students had requested.  

Olens not only censored the information about GILEE, but he also told the press that the students were aiding terrorists.

The GILEE website advocated for the Iraq War, the bombing of Iran, smeared Arab-Americans, and repeatedly slandered President Jimmy Carter, and says he is a supporter of genocide. 

 A research report, Deadly Exchange, by the American-Israeli Alliance in partnership with Jewish Voice for Peace, argues that these police exchange programs train with an occupying force that rules a population deprived of human and civil rights. 

 Rather than promoting security for American citizens, these programs facilitate an exchange of methods of state violence and control that endangers us all, especially people of color.   

“Since GILEE started in 1992, we have very harshly felt the effects of unjust racial profiling, stop and frisk laws, mass incarceration, and violent police killings. The police have become an occupying militarized force in Black communities, where they do not protect and serve but incarcerate Blacks for minor violations,” Dawn O’Neal, Black Lives Matter, told the Streets of Atlanta. 

“The U.S. imprisons more people than any country in the world, and a disproportionate number of those in prison are Black.  Incarceration has tripled since the inception of GILEE,” O’Neal said.

Encounters between Black communities and police in Ferguson and other cities across the country have led Palestinians and Black Lives Matter activists to draw parallels between police brutality in the U.S. and in Palestine.

 The video “When I See Them, We See Us” explains the connections between state-sanctioned violence and structural racism in Palestine and the United States.    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFVijtMN4dU   

Palestinians on social media gave instructions to African Americans in Ferguson on how to treat the inhalation of tear gas. They made connections between the systems of violence and criminalization that make Black and Palestinian bodies so easily expendable.  

If the GILEE training is not stopped, we will continue to see cases like Kathryn Johnson, a 92-year-old grandmother gunned down in her home by a police SWAT team …who then planted drugs in her home,” O’Neal said.

O’Neal talked about other victims of militarized police.  Jamarion Robinson was shot 76 times by U.S. marshalls, Baby Bou Bou was crippled and disfigured by a flashbang thrown in his crib by militarized police, and Anthony Hill, a veteran with mental issues, was shot naked and unarmed by a police officer. 

This is only the tip of the iceberg of civilians killed across the country by militarized police trained in war zones by foreign countries. 

 A 2015 study by the US Department of Justice concluded close to 1,000 people are killed by police on average each year.  The victims are disproportionately minorities, Indigenous, Native American, Black, Latino, the mentally ill, and homeless people.  

 “We must now detach ourselves from these police exchanges which only exacerbate already problematic and deadly policing in the U.S.,” Ilise Cohen, Founder of Jewish Voice for Peace Atlanta Chapter, said. 

” We must now advocate for closing Atlanta’s relationship with GILEE,” Cohen said.

2 thoughts on “End the Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange (GILEE) Program

  1. Yep…even more relevant now. Thanks!!

    Lorraine Fontana 410 Candler Park Drive, NE, Apt. C-5 Atlanta, GA 30307 (678) 595-6188 Pronouns: She/Her

    I know the world is bruised and bleeding, and though it is important not to ignore its pain, it is also critical to refuse to succumb to its malevolence. Like failure, chaos contains information that can lead to knowledge — even wisdom. Like art. —Toni Morrison

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  2. p.s. How are you doing?? Any significant changes in your recovery journey?

    Lorraine Fontana 410 Candler Park Drive, NE, Apt. C-5 Atlanta, GA 30307 (678) 595-6188 Pronouns: She/Her

    I know the world is bruised and bleeding, and though it is important not to ignore its pain, it is also critical to refuse to succumb to its malevolence. Like failure, chaos contains information that can lead to knowledge — even wisdom. Like art. —Toni Morrison

    On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 12:46 PM Lorraine Fontana < lorrainefontana44@gmail.com> wrote:

    Yep…even more relevant now. Thanks!! > > Lorraine Fontana > 410 Candler Park Drive, NE, Apt. C-5 > Atlanta, GA 30307 > (678) 595-6188 > Pronouns: She/Her > > I know the world is bruised and bleeding, and though it is important not > to ignore its pain, it is also critical to refuse to succumb to its > malevolence. Like failure, chaos contains information that can lead to > knowledge — even wisdom. Like art. > —Toni Morrison > > > > > > On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 12:28 PM Streets of Atlanta <

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