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BNV Managing Editor
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Posts: 7,797
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Location: , , United Kingdom
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14-05-05, 05:44 PM
i have yet to see any of these marches covered in the main press tv properly. didnt even know there were marches going on much. i only saw one in the daily mirror. it was a centre page spread. i noticed it because my friend who was murdered his mum was in the paper talking about the march
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4547539.stm
The march to find Anton's killers
By Stephen Dowling
BBC News 
Anton's parents led the march through west LondonThey had come from as far afield as Wales and Cheshire - parents who knew too well the pain of seeing their child murdered.
Standing in the blustery streets opposite Ealing Hospital in west London, they offered support to Vanessa Hyman and Delroy Elliott, whose son Anton Hyman was founded dead in March last year.
Anton, who would have turned 18 on Sunday, had been tortured, knifed and shot, and his body dumped in the River Brent at Greenford, west London. His killers have never been caught.
Though nine people were arrested, all were later released on police bail. More than a year later, Anton's parents, and their supporters, are still facing a wall of silence.
On Saturday, they decided to speak out.
Justice
The march, organised with the help of the anti-violence campaign groups Mothers Against Guns and Mothers Against Murder and Aggression (MAMAA) was their attempt to try and break that silence.
Friends and members of the local community also rallied round, many wearing t-shirts emblazoned with a picture of Anton, and the slogan "Gone, But Not Forgotten'.
While organisers handed out whistles to the crowd, Vanessa Hyman took to the head of the march. Stood next to her was Michelle Forbes, the vice-chairman of Mothers Against Guns
Banners with Anton's face were carried by the crowd
She lost her son Leon, shot outside her home in December 2003. Again, his killers have never been found. She was one of a dozen parents taking part who had lost a son or daughter.
To clarion calls of "What do we want? Justice! When do we want it? Now!", the marchers began their long journey towards Acton Park, lead by a phalanx of police motorcyclists.
Father Delroy Elliott was near the head of the column, behind a banner bearing his dead son's face.
"It's been over a year now. People have come forward and said things, there's been no strong evidence. We're in limbo.
"We hope to get people speaking out,. What we've got to do is bring an awareness to people. Hopefully it will stop the gun crime and the knife crime," he said.
'Sad reflection'
He said he hoped the march would help convince "at least one person to put a gun down".
Clyde Gordon took to the streets as a show of supportDee Edwards, one of the march's organisers, said: "I can't believe a 17-year-old boy could be so brutally murdered and nobody saw anything.
"It's a sad reflection of our society... we have to support Delroy and Vanessa, and all the other parents who have had children murdered."
Friends of the family also took part. Richard Davison, from Hackney, wheeled a buggy with a sleeping baby, amid calls for justice and the shrieks of dozens of whistles.
"He [Anton] was a good friend of mine. He was always smiling and happy.
"And then somebody just stabs and throws him in a river, he's just murdered like a dog," he said.
He said people knew who the killers were - and their inability to speak out "People are always scared to give information. "They don't want to be informers."
Minute's silence
Another supporter, Clyde Gordon, from Wembley, was even more vocal, saying he wanted to show that the black community did not want to be associated with thuggish bravado.
"There's a majority of blacks who don't accept that. We want them out of our community. We want to separate ourselves from them. They don't promote us.
The police are still searching for Anton's killers
"We need to get through to the people who know something about this," he said, as the marchers trailed past curious shoppers. "The mothers, the girlfriends, the sons and friends."
At one stage, the column stopped for a minute's silence, amid the hustle and bustle of weekend shoppers.
Eventually, the marchers turned into Acton Park, where a soundstage prepared to play a CD featuring the voices of mothers whose children had been killed.
After an emotional afternoon, Vanessa Hyman told the BBC News website: "I hope the message gets through - that gun crime needs to stop.
"I hope that we may have saved somebody's life by marching today."
Think outside of the box...Think in spirit
Act as if it were impossible to fail!!!
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24-03-07, 09:28 AM
The Independent of 18 February 2007 contains an interesting version of events.
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Villager
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Posts: 339
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Location: , , United Kingdom
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24-03-07, 12:10 PM
MarcusGarveyLives wrote:
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The Independent of 18 February 2007 contains an interesting version of events.
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What does it say?? Hook me up with a link please........I remember this......I knew some of his friends and helped produce a tribute CD for him
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24-03-07, 05:24 PM
"Like many of his generation, Chris has seen death close up too many times. Three years ago, the body of his close friend Anton Hyman was found floating in the River Brent. He had been beaten, then stabbed multiple times, and finally shot execution style. The particularly brutal nature of his death was due to claims that he was acting as a police informant and skimming from his suppliers.
"I knew Anton for a long time and he was always a hothead. When he started selling drugs and making money, he thought he was invincible. Then when he got hold of his gun, he thought he was God. He had all these olders looking after him so he thought he was untouchable, but it was probably them same olders who killed him when he started messing with their business."
A few months before his death, Anton had been arrested for drug possession. Shortly before he was due to appear in court, police found three guns and two parcels of crack cocaine and heroin in a water mains box in the building where Anton lived. He was arrested again but released when none of his DNA was found to be on any of the items.
The finding of the guns frightened him. He took it as a warning that someone was after him and asked police to take him into custody because he was scared of being on the streets.
This, according to Chris, was his final mistake. "Asking the police for anything, that's seen as the same as being a snitch. And you just can't do that. That's something you really can never do. You never talk about your upline to anyone because those guys can make a phone call and in two minutes know everything you've said.
"When Anton came out, he tried to be the big man again but his days were numbered. It was only a matter of time." Three years on, nobody has been charged with his murder ...
(Source: The Independent, 18 February 2007)
[align=center] [/align]
[align=center]Did His Parents Know?[/align]
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25-03-07, 10:42 AM
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[align=center]Anyone with information is asked to call the Incident Room on 020 8785 8244 or call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.[/align]
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26-03-07, 08:42 PM
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[align=center]Gone quiet hasn't it?[/align]
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