|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
FBI begins questioning of 5,000 Middle Eastern immigrants
By Shannon Jones
13 December 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and local police departments
have begun questioning some 5,000 recent Middle Eastern immigrants
as part of the anti-terrorism measures ordered by
the US Justice Department.
The blatant ethnic profiling of Arabs by the Bush administration
has drawn strong objections from the immigrant community and civil
rights advocates. It comes in the wake of executive orders by
the White House authorizing military tribunals for non-citizens
suspected of terrorism and permitting the monitoring of attorney-client
conversations of immigrants detained as part of the governments
roundup of Arab-Americans in the wake of the September 11 events.
The targeting of Arab immigrants has recalled the US internment
of more than 100,000 Japanese immigrants and Japanese-American
citizens during World War II. Indeed, the roundup of Arab immigrants
carried out by the government since the terror attacks is the
largest mass detention in more than 50 years.
While the Justice Department claims its interrogation of immigrants
is voluntary, a closer examination reveals the opposite.
In a memorandum sent to regional offices of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS), the agencys executive director
declared that prospective interviewees could be held without bond
on immigration charges if the FBI requested it.
The questions being asked of immigrants by the FBI are detailed
and intrusive, including the individuals travel history,
education, political beliefs and reaction to the terror attacks.
The FBI is also requesting personal information, including the
names and phone numbers of friends and family members.
In most parts of the United States, FBI and police officials
plan to show up unannounced at immigrants homes, increasing
the sense of anxiety and insecurity. Further, such visits make
it more unlikely that those to be questioned will be able to obtain
proper legal advice or representation.
These interviews are inherently coercive, said
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Executive Director Anthony
Romero. Police are being asked to interrogate people on
the basis of their ethnicity, their religious beliefs and the
beliefs of their families.
Norman Dorsen, a former director of the ACLU, commented, Government
has a right to ask questions, but people have a right not to answer
questionsat least they have until now. If the INS is going
to lock them up, that puts very strong pressure on people.
Adding to these fears is the fact that immigrants who are deemed
uncooperative or suspicious by the FBI
could conceivably be subject to prosecution by a military tribunal
as stipulated by the Bush administration.
Abe Turaani of the Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee
said that the Justice Department order had evoked considerable
trepidation in the Arab-American community, commenting, I
had one man say to me, Where I come from this is the norm.
Here we are taught democracy and then we see this happening. Maybe
I would rather live somewhere where its predictable and
its the norm.
The information obtained by the FBI during the interrogations
will be fed into a government database. Presumably those named
as associates by interviewees can expect a knock on the door by
the FBI at some date in the future.
In the Detroit area some Arab immigrants not on the Justice
Departments list of recent immigrants have received a letter
from the US attorneys office requesting they set up an interview
with the FBI. One man, a 33-year old Kuwaiti-born engineer, received
a letter even though he has lived in the US for 10 years and has
been granted permanent resident status.
So blatantly undemocratic are the governments polices
that a number of police departmentsincluding Detroit, Michigan;
Portland, Oregon; Austin, Texas; and San Franciscohave objected
to participating in the questioning. The police force at the University
of Michigan is also refusing to take part. A statement issued
by the university said it would not send officers to question
students because none of the individuals identified for
questioning are suspected of or associated with criminal activity.
In order to deflect criticism, Attorney General John Ashcroft
offered the possibility that immigrants who provide useful information
about terrorism might be allowed to remain in the United States
under terms of the Responsible Cooperators program.
Civil rights activists derided this offer. Lucas Guttentag, director
of the ACLU, called the promise vague and completely
inconsistent with the threats by the Justice Department
to arrest or deport immigrants for minor visa violations.
On December 6 the American Civil Liberties Union and 18 other
organizations filed a lawsuit against the Justice Department to
obtain the names and other information about the hundreds of Arab-Americans
detained by the authorities in their nationwide dragnet. The US
Justice Department now says that criminal charges have been brought
against 110 individuals, 60 of whom are in federal custody, and
that 553 others charged with immigration violations are being
detained. The Justice Department is still refusing to release
the names of detainees, the charges levied against them or where
they are being held.
Ashcroft has justified his refusal to provide names on the
absurd grounds that the information would aid Osama bin Laden
and the al-Qaida network. Alternately, he has claimed revealing
detainees identities would violate their right to privacy.
The Justice Department has refused to respond to a Freedom of
Information Act request filed October 29 by civil right groups
on behalf of detainees.
One detainee, Osama El Far, an Egyptian who worked as a mechanic
for Trans States Airlines, recently launched a hunger strike to
try to obtain a hearing to force a public explanation for his
detention. He was picked up September 24 as part of the post-September
11 dragnet. El Far is being held in the Mississippi County Jail
in Charleston, Missouri. He has admitted overstaying his 1996
student visa but denies any connection to terrorism. El Far has
complained of harassment by guards and intimidation by other inmates
since his detention.
See Also:
Arab residents denounce witchhunt
at Detroit-area forum
[29 November 2001]
Military tribunals, monitoring
of lawyers: Bush announces new police-state measures
[17 November 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |