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Pendulum swings on civil liberties

Dr. James J. Zogby

Gulf News,  24-11-2003 

There is growing concern that the Department of Justice, DOJ, has over-reached in the post 9/11 period, implementing several programmes that have caused harm to Arab and Muslim immigrants and visitors to the United States.

Of particular concern have been: the large number of detentions and deportations that took place right after the 2001 terrorist attacks; the so-called "voluntary call-in" of 8,000 young Arab and Muslim immigrants; and the special registration programme that has targeted visitors from 25 Arab and Muslim countries.

It has become a shared concern of many law enforcement officials and civil rights leaders that these programmes have had a negative impact not only on the affected communities but on the United States' overall effort to combat terrorism, and the image of the United States overseas.

While President Bush was articulating a message of support to Arabs and Muslims, these DOJ initiatives were undercutting that message. Fear was created as thousands of Arab and Muslim immigrants and visitors became concerned about their rights and status in the United States.

The fact that many of those detained were held without charge, in secret, denied access to attorneys and their families, and in many instance, deported, fed this fear. Recent polling shows that concerns with the erosion of civil liberties and growing discrimination has spread to even first generation Arab Americans. These programmes created suspicion as well.

Some Americans came to feel that if the DOJ was targeting tens of thousands of Arabs and Muslims, then maybe there was reason to suspect these individuals. So even while President Bush was urging Americans not to discriminate against Arabs and Muslims, a different message was being send by those DOJ initiatives.

All of this combined to produce an additional negative effect that is a great concern to law enforcement professionals. FBI and local police departments know that their success depends on developing relationships, based on trust with the communities in which they are working.

It is for this reason that in some areas, for example, Arab American-FBI Advisory Commissions are being established. When the programmes imposed by the DOJ created fear and broke trust, it was these relationship-building efforts that suffered.

DOJ initiatives

The fact is that, as several studies have established, these DOJ initiatives have had a negligible impact in combating terror. This is true despite DOJ efforts to project them as important tools in the overall campaign.

It appears that the DOJ has deliberately obfuscated, presenting the numbers of immigrants who have been detained or deported as if they had something to do with the terrorism investigations, when, in virtually every case, these individuals were guilty of nothing more than violations of their immigration status.

So when Attorney General John Ashcroft says that as a result of the investigation into the terror attacks of 9/11, law enforcement had detained over 1,000 individuals, he is only being technically correct. These individuals were detained – but they were not charged with, nor was there any evidence that they had, anything to do with terrorism.

But as a result of this deliberate conflation of two distinct situations (visa violators and the investigation into 9/11) the impression was created that thousands of Arabs and Muslims were somehow guilty – spreading fear and creating suspicion.

As a frequent traveller to the Arab world, I am aware of yet another negative impact of these DOJ initiatives. They have damaged the US image and harmed our credibility and our relationship with the people of the region.

The good news is that there is a growing political coalition committed to challenging these practices, and they are having an impact. Broad coalitions of immigrant rights advocates have formed to demand an end to profiling, the registration programme and other violations of civil liberties.

Similarly, affected institutions like universities, hospitals and major businesses have mobilised to pressure for changes in the restrictive visa procedures that have made the US appear to be less open to visitors and immigrants. And major studies have been done both by reputable independent institutions and official government oversight bodies that have called into question the legality of some of these practices and their effectiveness.

Last year the Justice Department's own Inspector General issued a report that vindicated our concerns. He found that the Justice Department classified 762 of the detainees as "September 11 detainees." He stated that none of these detainees were charged with terrorist-related offenses, and that the decision to detain them was "extremely attenuated" from the 9/11 investigation.

Detainees

He concluded that the Justice Department's designation of detainees of interest to the 9/11 investigation was "indiscriminate and haphazard." and did not adequately distinguish between terrorism suspects and other immigration detainees.

Last week I testified before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on "America after 9/11: Freedom Preserved or Freedom Lost?" There was strong support for change. Many Senators expressed their concern with the behaviour of the DOJ and there are now a number of bills in the House and Senate that seek to correct the post 9/11 abuses.

The American public wants civil liberties to be protected, wants the United States to remain open and welcoming to Arab visitors. Two years after the United States was traumatised by terror, the pendulum now appears to be swinging back.

The writer, president of the Arab American Institute. Zogby is a Democrat political lobbyist and hosts the weekly radio and television programme 'A Capital View' on the Arab Network of America which is aired live in the Middle East on MBC. He writes a weekly column for Gulf News and can be contacted at jzogby@gulfnews.com

 

 
Earth, a planet hungry for peace

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in the West Bank, like a Python. (Alquds,10/25/03).

Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.

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