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New Jersey appeals court upholds secret detentions
By Kate Randall
17 June 2002
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In the first ruling to uphold the Bush administrations
secret detention policy, a New Jersey Appeals Court ruled June
12 that two county jails do not have to reveal the names of immigrants
rounded up since September 11. Bushs Justice Department
has refused to release the names of those arrested in the anti-terror
dragnet.
The three-judge panel of the Appellate Division of State Superior
Court overruled a March decision by a state judge ordering the
Hudson County and Passaic County jails to turn over the names
of those being held under a contract with the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS).
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New Jersey had
sued the jails under the states public information law,
and the federal Justice Department joined with county authorities
to fight the suit. The ACLU is also suing the government in federal
court, challenging the Justice Departments practice of routinely
closing court hearings involving detainees.
The ACLU suit is aimed at monitoring treatment of detainees
in custody and defending their right to legal representation.
According to the most recent figures released by the Justice Department,
104 detainees remain in custody nationwide, the majority of them
in New Jersey county jails.
The government has refused to reveal the detainees identities
in an effort to cover up both the scope of the sweep and the mistreatment
of those in custody. Amnesty International has reported that more
than 1,200 people, mainly foreign nationals, have been detained
by the US since September 11. The human rights group reported
that many were held incommunicado, suffered physical and verbal
abuse, and were held in prolonged solitary confinement.
Last month, the Justice Departments Office of Inspector
General began questioning inmates at the federal Metropolitan
Detention Center in Brooklyn and a county facility in Passaic,
New Jersey after some Middle Eastern detainees reported to their
lawyers that prison guards had cursed, kicked and punched dozens
of them. The men further reported that after the inspector generals
lawyers left, the guards retaliated against them for telling their
stories to the authorities.
The harassment and abuse of foreign immigrants will be further
expanded under a new visa plan announced by Attorney General John
Ashcroft on June 5. The program will require 100,000 foreign students,
tourists, researchers and others to register with the federal
government. Ashcroft said any non-citizen who might pose a
national security concern would be covered by the plan,
called the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System, which
will take effect this fall.
Government officials said men aged 18 to 35 from mainly Muslim
and Middle Eastern countries would make up the bulk of those followed.
The Justice Department indicated that all visitors from Iraq,
Iran, Libya, Sudan and Syria will be subject to the new procedures,
but that no country is totally exempt.
Those individuals selected are to be fingerprinted and photographed,
and will be required to fill out a long visa form. Non-citizens
seeking to enter the US who are fingered by the government as
potential terrorists will have their fingerprints
matched electronically against federal databases. After 30 days
they will be required to register with the INS.
The approximately 100,000 high risk visa holders
already in the US who fit the governments criteria will
be asked to come forward to register. Ashcroft said state and
local police officers would be called upon to help these individuals
voluntarily comply.
Civil rights advocates denounced the new plan as an attack
on civil liberties and an example of racial profiling of Arabs
and Muslims. Ameena Jandali of the San Francisco-based Islamic
Networks group told the San Francisco Chronicle, Whats
going to be next? Are all Muslims going to have to wear a yellow
or green crescent or something? This Lets go out and
track all Muslims and Arabs isnt going to bring about
the necessary results and it may harm or at least humiliate some
innocent people.
Since January, more than 700 visa applicants, identified by
the government as suspected terrorists, have been
turned away at US borders. These individuals were stopped by authorities
on the basis of information assembled in the Foreign Terrorist
Task Forces expanded database. This watch list
is compiled from information from the FBI, CIA, Defense Department
and cooperating foreign governments, and includes information
such as credit card and telephone numbers.
The government also reported this week that the INS recently
instructed all agents at airports, borders and ports to make a
complete and thorough search of all baggage carried by Yemeni
travelers to the US, and to inventory the contents.
The government also plans to closely monitor all foreign students.
Under a system the INS plans to have in operation by July 1, the
agency will record the names of all students and the dates they
obtained their visas. Colleges and universities will then be required
to serve as virtual immigration agents, reporting to the government
whether the students show up and if they terminate their studies.
This wide-reaching plan is being put into action despite the fact
that foreign students make up only 2 percent of all temporary
visa holders, and there is no indication they represent a disproportionate
terrorist threat.
The announcement last week that the Bush administration will
indefinitely incarcerate Jose Padilla, an American citizen, as
an unlawful combatant demonstrates that the governments
authoritarian methods of surveillance, secret detention and other
civil liberties violationsoriginally said to target only
non-citizensare now being extended to citizens as well.
Padilla, who now calls himself Abdullah al Muhajir, is being held
without the right to an attorney at the US Navy brig in South
Carolina.
Another American citizen, Yaser Esam Hamdi, 22, who is being
held at the Norfolk Naval Station in Virginia, has been denied
access to an attorney. Hamdi was captured during a US-led assault
on a prison in Mazar-i-Sharif in Afghanistan last November and
transferred to Quantanamo Naval Base in Cuba. He was flown to
the US after authorities learned he had been born in the US.
A Federal District Court in Norfolk ruled that Hamdi should
be allowed to meet with a public defender, but the Justice Department
appealed the ruling. The case has now gone to the Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit, which has yet to issue a ruling.
Najeeb Nuaimi, an attorney in private practice in Qatar, is
seeking to represent Hamdi. The young mans family, who live
in Saudi Arabia, have had no contact with their son since his
capture. Hamdis father, Esam Fouad Hamdi, has petitioned
a federal court for his sons release.
See Also:
Another step towards presidential dictatorship:
Bush orders US citizen held indefinitely by military
[12 June 2002]
Bushs new Department of Homeland
Defense: the scaffolding of a police state
[8 June 2002]
Amnesty says US leads in human rights
violations following September 11
[8 June 2002]
Bush administration cites September 11
failures to attack democratic rights
FBI gets blank check for domestic spying
[7 June 2002]
INS pretext for political
retaliation
Palestinian activist arrested in New York City
[4 May 2002]
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