AN OFFICIAL SITE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA REPUBLIC NATIONAL GOVERNMENT

Without Just Cause

Political Prisoners Campaign

It is recognize that a population may be rendered stateless within its own territory when sovereignty is displaced or nationality is overridden by foreign administration. For centuries Moors have been subjected to foreign protections and colonial oppression without proper national safeguards deprived of their natural allegiance and rendered vulnerable to statelessness or legal displacement.
For centuries, Moorish people worldwide—and Moorish Americans in particular—have endured sustained colonial oppression, dispossession, and the systematic denial of fundamental rights. These efforts have sought not only to silence dissent and suppress self-determination, but to erase national identity, criminalize lawful assertion of rights, and undermine legitimate sovereign authority. Countless Moors have been subjected to political imprisonment, torture, inhumane detention conditions, enforced disappearance, and other forms of abuse, often simply for asserting their nationality, heritage, or allegiance to lawful governance. Families have been separated for generations, left yearning for reunification and justice while these injustices persist.
At the same time, the lawful authority and reestablished efforts of the United States of America Republic have been continuously challenged, obstructed, and mischaracterized as being a sovereign citizen (see The Southern Poverty Law Center, website: https://www.splcenter.org/resources/extremist-files/sovereign-citizens-movement/), through colonial legal frameworks and administrative practices designed to maintain control rather than uphold justice. These actions represent an ongoing resistance to accountability and an attempt to suppress the restoration of sovereign rights and national dignity of Moorish American People.
From the City of New Mecca, the United States of America Republic continues its work to expose colonial injustices, demand accountability, and advocate for the release of Moorish political prisoners and all individuals unlawfully detained for asserting their fundamental rights.
General Information
The “Without Just Cause Political Prisoners” Campaign is an advocacy and public-awareness initiative dedicated to addressing the detention, prosecution, and imprisonment of Moors and Moorish Americans alleged to be held without just cause, due process, or equal protection under law, particularly where political beliefs, national identity claims, conscience, or peaceful civic activity are implicated.
The campaign focuses on cases in which state or governmental actions are alleged to exceed lawful authority, disregard constitutional protections, or conflict with established principles of domestic and international human rights law. It seeks to bring attention to patterns of political targeting, procedural irregularities, and systemic abuses that undermine the rule of law and public trust in judicial and administrative institutions.
Mission and Purpose
The mission of the Without Just Cause Political Prisoners Campaign is to:
· Advocate for the recognition and protection of fundamental human and civil rights;
· Expose and challenge unlawful or unjust detention practices;
· Promote transparency, accountability, and lawful governance;
· Support individuals and families affected by politically motivated prosecutions or imprisonment.
Guiding Principles
The campaign is guided by principles rooted in:
· Due process of law and fair trial guarantees;
· Presumption of innocence and protection against arbitrary detention;
· Freedom of thought, conscience, expression, and political association;
· Equal protection under the law, without discrimination based on political status, ideology, or identity;
· International human rights norms, including those articulated in widely recognized treaties and declarations.
Core Activities
The Without Just Cause Political Prisoners Campaign engages in:
· Public education and awareness efforts;
· Legal and historical research relating to political imprisonment;
· Documentation of alleged rights violations;
· Advocacy before domestic institutions and international bodies;
· Coalition-building with civil society organizations, legal advocates, and human rights defenders.
Scope and Vision
The campaign operates as a non-violent, non-partisan initiative committed to lawful advocacy. Its long-term vision is a society in which no individual is deprived of liberty for political reasons, where government authority is exercised within legal bounds, and where justice systems function transparently, independently, and in full respect of human dignity.

Without Just Cause

Political Prisoners Campaign -- Stories

Here we share the stories of Moorish Americans who have repatriated back to and have reaffirmed their allegiance to the United States of America Republic National Government and have been imprisoned for exercising their human rights. Their stories must be told, their injustices must be addressed, and the cycle of colonial oppression must be brought to an end.
Learning about these experiences—and taking action to support justice, restoration, and self-determination—is an essential step toward ensuring that these violations are neither forgotten nor repeated.
These individuals highlight the growing colonial efforts to silence dissent and suppress fundamental freedoms. Countless political prisoners around the world are subjected to torture, inhumane conditions, enforced disappearance, or other forms of abuse. Their families yearn to be reunited with their imprisoned loved ones. We can’t let that continue. We’re advocating for the release of these and all political prisoners through public diplomacy, bilateral engagement, outreach in international organizations, and meetings with other governments, NGOs, and political prisoners’ families. Read on below to learn about these political prisoners’ stories and what you can do to help.

READ STORIES BELOW
1. U.S.A.R. National Judge Prince Pugh Bey, Chicago police came to his home and arrested him without indicating any reason. He has four children, who ranged from 3 to 11 years old at the time he was unjustly detained for not turning his youngest daughter over to Child Protective Services Stating to police she's a Moorish American National. Cook County has stripped him and his daughter of their nationality. Judge Prince Pugh Bey and his children all have National Birth Certificates issued by their National Government, the United States of America Republic. He must be released without delay. We call for U.S.A.R. National Judge Prince Pugh Bey’s immediate and unconditional release so that he can be reunited with his loved ones, who are gravely concerned for his health and well-being., all political prisoners should be freed. #WithoutJustCause #JailedForWhat