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Anita Hofschneider/Civil Beat/2021

About the Authors

Innocenta Sound-Kikku

Innocenta Sound-Kikku is a community leader in Hawaii originally from the island of Lukunor in Chuuk, Micronesia. She is an active advocate, storyteller, interpreter, teacher, 鈥渁unty,鈥 cultural navigator, and the founder of the intergenerational youth program Pacific Voices, a program of Kokua Kalihi Valley Comprehensive Family Services. Sound-Kikku is vice-chair of the Micronesian Health Advisory Coalition and a founding member of the Micronesian Minister & Leaders Uut.

Tadasy 鈥淭ester鈥 Puas

Pastor Tadasy 鈥淭ester鈥 Puas is from the small island of Kuttu in Chuuk, Micronesia, and currently resides in Honolulu where he serves as a pastor in a local Chuukese church. Pastor Puas is a founding member of the Micronesian Minister & Leaders Uut.

Dear Mayor: It is in our collective island spirit of respect and our duty as caretakers of the Micronesian community that we, a concerned group of Micronesian ministers, parents, advocates, and allies would like to respectfully submit our plea and call on your leadership to respond to the over-policing of the Micronesian community.

In recent weeks and months, and related bias has led to much pain, including the tragic death of one of our children, Iremamber Sykap.

In our unity as Micronesians and in respect for your leadership as mayor, we appeal to your humanity and submit the following calls for action:

  • Invite the Department of Justice to conduct an independent investigation into the racial disparities found in use of force by the Honolulu Police Department that have resulted in the suffering and death of children in our community.
  • Investigate and hold accountable parties involved in the illegal and improper leaking of confidential juvenile information and other private information about the Sykap family.
  • Monitor, hold accountable, and enforce procedures to end the HPD practice of disclosing confidential and false information. (This is not unique to Hawaii, and must end everywhere.)

For the past several years, our community has discussed the ways in which we are overrepresented in the criminal legal system (with our community seen as suspect), while being underrepresented in governance roles and leadership.

Your office 鈥 and all residents of Honolulu 鈥 should be deeply concerned about the HPD鈥檚 own 鈥淯se of Force鈥 data that reveals significant racial disparities.

Demonstrators in support of the police as well as supporters of the victim gather outside of the court house in Honolulu Hawaii on Friday, June 25, 2021. Civil Beat photo Ronen Zilberman.
Demonstrators in support of the police as well as supporters of police-shooting victims gather outside of a court house in Honolulu. Ronen Zilberman/Civil Beat/2021

More recently, hundreds of HPD officers and their supporters rallied outside the courthouse chanting 鈥淔ree the three鈥 and claiming to be above the law. We must come together to ensure fairness and justice for all before the divisions become too great to heal.

To address these difficult issues, we are ready to partner with your administration and relevant entities to find common and meaningful solutions that will be beneficial for all Hawaii residents.

We ask that Honolulu City and County leadership meet regularly with diverse Micronesian community leaders and work to repair these broken systems and build mutual trust. We endeavor to be directly involved in any activities that ensure fairness in our systems so that everyone feels they belong.

We recognize that none of us can do this alone. We must work together and we must start now.

To begin, we propose the following steps:

  1. Support a diverse spectrum of Micronesian leaders and Micronesian-led organizations, including providing direct financial and in-kind support.
  2. Co-organize and meaningfully participate in roundtable gatherings to address community perceptions, needs, and strengths as well as collaborative, community-led solutions, resources and opportunities.
  3. Expand language access and other essential services that ensure the equal treatment and protection of the Micronesian community.

We stand together as people who care deeply about justice and equal treatment for all. We stand united in our call for a federal investigation of the Sykap killing, the Lindani Myeni killing, and the HPD鈥檚 history of racial disparities in use of force.

It is only through a transparent and thorough examination of the facts, conducted by independent and neutral investigators, that we will begin to heal as a community.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Authors

Innocenta Sound-Kikku

Innocenta Sound-Kikku is a community leader in Hawaii originally from the island of Lukunor in Chuuk, Micronesia. She is an active advocate, storyteller, interpreter, teacher, 鈥渁unty,鈥 cultural navigator, and the founder of the intergenerational youth program Pacific Voices, a program of Kokua Kalihi Valley Comprehensive Family Services. Sound-Kikku is vice-chair of the Micronesian Health Advisory Coalition and a founding member of the Micronesian Minister & Leaders Uut.

Tadasy 鈥淭ester鈥 Puas

Pastor Tadasy 鈥淭ester鈥 Puas is from the small island of Kuttu in Chuuk, Micronesia, and currently resides in Honolulu where he serves as a pastor in a local Chuukese church. Pastor Puas is a founding member of the Micronesian Minister & Leaders Uut.


Latest Comments (0)

Did the HPD officers involved in stopping that car know the ethnic identities of the people inside? Would/should the officers have done anything differently if they thought the people in the car belonged to some other ethnic group(s)? It is my understanding that the answer to all these questions is "no".

Chiquita · 3 years ago

There's a young guy I know comes around here sometimes who has been homeless and mentally impaired for years. A few years back he began to talk of a new group coming in and taking over the homeless in the parks. Stealing and, in general, threatening him and others. Yesterday, there was a homeless Hawaiian man, who asked if he could sit inside the courtyard for awhile because he was being chased by a group where he stays.聽This group carries knives and use them, I not talking tableware here. According to my friend they are a significant threat to the homeless living in the parks. They are young and brave and must do a lot that causes concern among the homeless who are already pretty tough. The problem seems to be getting worse.聽I can't think of a place the community and the police should become more active together than there. Its true, the police need the action of the community involved to stem future problems while engaging with host cultures. Too long it's been true here that the toughest make their way in and survive. These concerns are taking it to a new level. Children with knives.聽Speaking for my friend I'm sure he'd love to see HPD and the community work together.聽

youknowyouknow · 3 years ago

Is it really just HPD or is it with the Hawaii Community as a whole?聽 HPD responds to an issue reported by someone in the community.If a local resident, Samoan, Chinese, Japanese, Caucasian, visitor, etc. were to cause an issue someone would report it and HPD would respond and react accordingly to the severity of the issue.

surferx808 · 3 years ago

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IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.

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