Pubdate: Sun, 30 Apr 2000 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 2000 Daily News, L.P. Page: 26 Contact: 450 W. 33rd St., New York, N.Y. 10001 Website: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Forum: http://www.nydailynews.com/manual/news/e_the_people/e_the_people.htm Author: Thomas Hackett, Daily News Staff Writer Note: The following websites have information and links to many of the Millennium Marijuana March events in about 100 cities worldwide: http://www.cures-not-wars.org/mmm/ http://www.millionmarijuanamarch.com/mmm/mmm1_1.htm http://www.schmoo.co.uk/world.htm http://home.c2i.net/freddiefreak/go.htm BLACK LEADERS' SUPPORT CALLED BOON FOR POT RALLY The annual Marijuana March--usually a ho-hum, haphazard tradition held the first Saturday of May in lower Manhattan -- could well pack some political punch this year in reaction the recent surge of NYPD pot busts. Organizers of the May 6 Millennium Marijuana March -- which will begin at the intersection of Broadway and Houston, pass City Hall and end in Battery Park -- say the Rev. Al Sharpton and other black leaders are lending their support to the event. The heightened enforcement attention to low-level drug activity, particularly marijuana, singles out blacks and Hispanics, march organizers say. The expected presence of the black leaders at a traditionally white, middle-class protest should call attention the May Giuliani's recent anti-drug initiative Operation Condor -- and in particular the botched buy-and-bust that resulted in the death of Patrick Dorismond on March 16. Cops made nearly 47 times as many marijuana arrests last year (33,471) as they did in 1992 (720). A spokesman for Sharpton said his organization was not yet officially on board, and Sharpton had not said he definitely would attend Saturday's event. But organizers say that even in Sharpton's participation is limited to lending moral support to the marchers, it is significant. "Operation Condor is selective prosecution," said Dana Beal, a founder of Cures not Wars, a group working to get marijuana legalized for medical purposes. "The criminalization of marijuana was racist in its inception and has always been racist in its application." On the same day that about 10,000 people are expected to march down Broadway, thousands more will gather in dozens of cities worldwide, from Albuquerque to Atlanta to Adelaide, Australia. Most of the demonstrations are expected to be peaceful affairs, with few arrests. "The police realize we're not a violent organization, that people who come to the march -- even though many of them are obviously smoking joints -- aren't a danger," said Chris Sanders, a coordinator of the Cannabis Coalition in London. Officers monitoring last year's New York rally vowed zero tolerance of pot smoking and arrested 65 demonstrators. City Hall has argued that more vigilant enforcement of drug laws under Mayor Giuliani has reduced all types of crime in recent years. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake