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WSWS : News
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America
Bush expands "voluntary interviews" of Middle Eastern
immigrants
By Kate Randall
29 March 2002
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On March 20, US Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that
the Justice Department is expanding its voluntary interview
program, with plans to question 3,000 more mainly Muslim and Arab
immigrants. The interviews will target men ages 18 to 33 who have
entered the country since September 11 and hold passports from
or have visited countries where the Bush administration says there
is a significant Al Qaeda presence. Civil liberties and Arab-American
groups have denounced the plan as a form of racial profiling and
an attack on democratic rights.
Last October, Ashcroft ordered US attorneys across the country
to locate and interview nearly 5,000 men, 18 to 33, who entered
the US after January 2000 on non-immigrant visas. The new initiative
indicates that, rather than being a temporary measure in response
to the events of September 11, the government intends to institute
this project as an ongoing operation with no end in sight.
At a press conference announcing the expansion of the program,
the attorney general said that law enforcement officials were
able to locate less than half, or 2,261, of the 4,793 men on the
governments original list. Of these, about 680 reportedly
have left the country, 785 were believed to have relocated inside
the US, and the whereabouts of approximately 1,000 could not be
determined. Ashcroft said the governments failure to find
many of those on the list indicated serious flaws that exist
in our ability to locate visitors to our country. The Justice
Department will continue to seek out those individuals who were
missed in the first round of questioning.
According to the sketchy report released by the Justice Department,
through the interviews the government obtained the name and address
of one person with possible ties to the alleged September 11 hijackers
and one man who recalled seeing one of the hijackers.
Two of those interviewed were reportedly acquainted with individuals
who had taken flight training courses. Ashcroft said no one had
been charged with connections to terrorism.
The attorney general claimed the initiative was a success because
it may well have contributed to the fact that we have not
suffered a substantial terrorist attack. According to his
reasoning, the more repressive and sweeping the measures, the
more effective they will be in putting the terrorists on
notice. By this logic, any actionno matter how destructive
of basic democratic rightscan be justified in the name of
the war on terrorism. If the interviews are warranted,
why not mass round-ups, or concentration camps? Why should anyone
dismiss the possibility if not the likelihood that under conditions
of sharp social crisis, such measures would not be taken?
In fact, the Bush administrations voluntary interview
operation bears an eerie resemblance to provisions of a program
set up under the Reagan administration two decades ago which posed
similar threats to the democratic rights of the US population,
citizens and non-citizens alike. The Federal Emergency Management
Agencys secret Rex 84 operation called
for the declaration of a State of Domestic National Emergency
and the rounding up of 400,000 Central Americans and known
Communist terrorists in the event of a war in Central America.
With the interview programalong with the rash measures
assaulting basic democratic rights put into effect in the wake
of September 11precedents are being established, and procedures
put into operation, which in their totality constitute the framework
of a police state. Enormous pressure is being placed on individuals
to submit to interrogation, despite the fact that there is no
reason to suspect they have knowledge of any crime. These men
are being targeted, according to Ashcroft, because they might
either wittingly or unwittingly, be in the same circles, communities
or social groups as those engaged in terrorist activities.
Of those interviewed, fewer than 20 were taken into custody,
mainly for immigration violations. Three were arrested on criminal
charges. Ashcroft refused to elaborate on the charges, claiming
security considerations, stating, We are not going to disclose
sensitive law enforcement information in a report which might
compromise our ability to disrupt terrorist activities.
The fact that any interviewees at all were taken into custody
debunks government claims that the interviews were part of a cooperative
fact-finding mission. The government claimed the questioning
was simply to gather information, and would be conducted on a
voluntary, non-threatening basis. But those individuals in possible
violation of immigration law, who presented themselves voluntarily,
have been subject to arrest and possible deportation. Failure
to come forward for interrogation may also have consequences.
David Leopold, an immigration lawyer who attended interviews in
Detroit and Columbus, Ohio, commented, The reality is that
if someone refuses [to talk to authorities], theyre stuck
with a complete unknown about what their future will be in this
country.
Ashcroft pointed to the real aim of the interviews, commenting
that the sheer volume of [police] activity ... ensured that
potential terrorists hiding in our communities knew that law enforcement
was on the job in their neighborhoods. In other words, rather
than preventing future terrorist attacks, the actual objective
is to create an atmosphere of continual police surveillance and
intimidation in immigrant communities, and among the population
at large. All the information obtained through the interviews
is being entered into a vast national databank, which is accessible
by the Justice Department investigators, as well as other federal,
state and local law enforcement agencies. The names of people
picked up for minor legal infractions, such as traffic violations,
can be checked against this list and these individuals could face
charges for terrorist or other crimes.
No one knows what names and information are being compiled
in this databank. While the interrogations have targeted Muslim
and Arab men, information about their friends, neighbors, employers
and other acquaintancesas well as their political affiliationsmay
be included. While the operation has primarily targeted people
of Middle Eastern and Central Asian descent, it represents a fundamental
assault on the civil liberties of the entire populationboth
immigrants and citizens.
At last Wednesdays press conference Ashcroft stated that
he was inspired by the quiet courage of these visitors to
our country, and I want to commend them for stepping forward and
speaking out in the face of evil. The reality is that their
stepping forward has more to do with fear of reprisal,
or fear that failure to appear might be construed as guilt. These
individuals have far more to fear from John Ashcroft and the anti-democratic
methods of the government apparatus than they do from Al Qaeda.
Added to this is the fact that the status of many immigrants
is in limbo because the Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) has a tremendous backlog of visa applications. Many non-citizens
have filed for permanent residency status under provisions of
the Legal Immigration Family Equity Act (LIFE Act), enacted in
December 2000, but have waited months on end for a reply from
the INS.
The Life Act was touted by supporters in Congressas well
as George W. Bushas providing amnesty for individuals awaiting
action on their immigration applications. But since September
11, a number of immigrants and their families who have utilized
the provisions of the Life Act have been taken into custody. One
high-profile example of this is the case of Rabih Haddad, a prominent
Muslim cleric from Ann Arbor, Michigan who has been imprisoned
since mid-December on minor visa violations despite applying for
amnesty under the program. Many more less-publicized cases undoubtedly
exist.
In addition to ethnic discrimination and intimidation, a central
aim of the interview program is to build up a network of informants
among the immigrant population. Ashcroft commented, The
task forces were able to develop sources of information that should
give potential terrorists pause. In fact, many of those interviewed
volunteered to provide information on an ongoing basis in the
future, and a significant number offered to serve as interpreters
in our efforts against terrorism. Using the threat of possible
arrest or deportation, the government is coercing a group of individuals
to operate as snitches in immigrant communities.
The WSWS spoke to Hussein Ibish of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee (ADC) in Washington, DC. He said that the organization
was advising individuals to consult with an attorney before deciding
whether or not to agree to be interviewed, given the fact
that any Arab or Muslim male can be incarcerated for even the
most flimsy violations. Ibish added, I believe that
what the government is doing is compiling dossiers on young Arab
males. This data is being put into a database that can be used
in the future.
While decrying expansion of the program and the governments
racial profiling, the majority of Arab-American advocacy groups
continue to lend credence to the interview program as a legitimate
anti-terrorism effort. A press release from the ADC said that
the Arab-American community is as committed as any other
segment of American society to ensuring our nations security,
and that the group did indeed cooperate with the authorities
to ensure that this process went as smoothly as possible.
As an expression of the contempt with which the political establishment
holds the Arab and Muslim population in the US, Ashcrofts
announcement came without notifying in advance any of the Arab-American
groups who had collaborated in the first round of interviews.
The Justice Department is interested in fostering relationships
with such groups only to the extent that they can enlist their
support in rounding up more immigrants for questioning.
Those who do come forward to be interrogated by government
officials, rather than being rewarded for their efforts, face
the threat of arrest, deportation or pressure from the authorities
to become informants. Billed as a initiative to fight terrorism,
it is far more likely that the expansion of the interview programand
the repression and discrimination that accompany itwill
fuel anger and frustration among those it targets, which in turn
could contribute to future terrorist attacks.
See Also:
Amnesty International report condemns US
treatment of immigrant detainees
[26 March 2002]
Interviews with supporters of Rabih
Haddad
Muslim cleric the target of Bush anti-terror dragnet
[26 March 2002]
Bush targets Middle Eastern
immigrants in new police dragnet
[13 February 2002]
FBI begins questioning
of 5,000 Middle Eastern immigrants
[13 December 2001]
Ashcroft defends Bushs
war against the Constitution
Tells Senate hearing that critics aid terrorists
[12 December 2001]
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