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WSWS : News
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America
New York state terror arreststest case in
attack on rights
By Bill Vann
26 September 2002
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The FBIs arrest earlier this month of six young Arab-American
men in the depressed former steel-making center of Lackawanna,
New York has initiated what may become a test case on how far
the Bush administration can go in employing extra-constitutional
measures in the name of its war on terrorism.
The charges against the six men bear the hallmarks of a trumped-up
and politically motivated prosecution. Justice Department sources
have indicated that the order to make the arrests came directly
from the Bush White House and Attorney General John Ashcroft.
The men were rounded up just two days after the first anniversary
of the September 11 terrorist attacks and shortly after the administration
had declared a Code Orange terrorist alert.
Administration officials portrayed the arrests as a rare success
for US intelligence, the uncovering and apprehension of an Al
Qaeda sleeper cell that was silently waiting inside
the United States for orders to strike. The central allegation
is that the defendants attended a training camp run by Al Qaeda
in Afghanistan in June 2001.
As facts have emerged about the suspects and the charges against
them, it has become increasingly clear that the governments
actions were hardly the coup that Washington had portrayed.
Those thus far charged are Yahya Goba, 25; Sahim Alwan, 29;
Faysal Galab, 26; Shafel Mosed, 24; Yasein Taher, 24; and Mukhtar
Ali al-Bakri, 22. The first five were picked up in raids in Lackawanna,
while Al-Bakri was grabbed by police in Bahrain, the day after
his wedding, thrown into jail, beaten up by local police and immediately
extradited to the US.
They have all been under investigation since June 2001three
months before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagonand
several had freely agreed to interviews with FBI agents more than
a year ago. Others, though contacted by federal agents, were never
even questioned.
One of the six, Sahim Alwan, was well known to the FBI. A former
security guard at a local Blue Cross/Blue Shield office, he had
assisted the agency in a federal fraud investigation in the late
1990s.
Federal prosecutors have provided no evidence that the six
were engaged in a terrorist plot when they were rounded up September
13. The lack of such a charge has created a serious quandary for
the federal magistrate who has to rule on whether the six should
be released on bail pending their indictment and trial. Federal
prosecutors are opposing the granting of bail. No charges have
yet been presented to a grand jury.
I want to know if they are a danger to the community
now, not in 2001, now, Judge Kenneth Schroeder said to the
prosecutors, expressing frustration over the governments
failure to spell out any criminal threat posed by the six.
In a protracted bail hearing in the Buffalo federal court,
the prosecutor briefly referred to an email sent by one of the
men entitled The Big Meal, suggesting that he was
using secret code to refer to a plot. The mans attorney
pointed out that the reply to the e-mail read: What are
you talking about? What is this meal? I dont understand
anything. Do you mean a hamburger or what?
Defense lawyers insist that the six men traveled to Pakistan
for religious training with the Tablighi Jamaat, an Islamic revivalist
movement with millions of devotees in the Middle East and Central
Asia.
That such a movement would find converts in Lackawanna is testimony
to the decay of the former industrial center, where employers
like US Steel and Ford shut down industrial facilities in the
1980s that had attracted earlier generations of immigrants, including
Yemenis, who began coming to the area in the 1920s. While 3,000
Yemenis remain in the town of 19,000, there are few decent jobs
available to the youth of the community, which has become increasingly
ghettoized.
Lawyers for the men state that the six learned of a planned
trip across the border to Afghanistan only after they had arrived
in Pakistan. The federal prosecutor appeared to confirm this,
saying in court that it was in Karachi that one of the defendants
was told of their ultimate destination and he felt as if
a shovel hit his head.
The six are charged under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act (AEDPA), the same draconian statute used against John
Walker Lindh after his capture during the US invasion of Afghanistan.
Lindh was charged after being captured by US forces in Afghanistan
together with a group of Taliban fighters in November 2001. He
was accused of violating the antiterrorism act and conspiring
to murder American citizens. He pleaded to two lesser offenses
and avoided a trial.
The AEDPA, enacted in 1996 under the Clinton administration,
gives the US secretary of state blanket power to label any group
in the world as a foreign terrorist organization and
place on trial anyone who knowingly provides material support
or resources to [it] ...or attempts or conspires to do so...
While Lindh was charged on the flimsy basis that he fought
alongside the Taliban, which in turn was in alliance with Al Qaeda,
there is even less substance to the accusations made against the
six Arab-American men in Lackawanna.
They are accused of providing training and personnel
for Al Qaeda by attending a camp run by the organization. Only
two of the defendants have acknowledged going to the camp in Afghanistan,
where the government claims that they were instructed in the use
of firearms and heard a speech by Osama bin Laden. Alwan told
investigators that he stayed at the camp against his will, feigning
an ankle injury and crying to convince its organizers to let him
leave.
Under federal trial rules, the testimony of one member of a
group of defendants cannot be used against the others in the same
trial.
The specific section of the statute used against them was ruled
unconstitutional by a federal trial court in a decision upheld
by the US Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. In a case brought by
a human rights organization asserting its right to associate with
the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party), the courts found that the words
training and personnel in the statute
were unconstitutionally vague.
The law effectively denies the First Amendment rights to freedom
of speech and freedom of association, making it possible to criminally
charge someone for nothing more than speaking out on behalf of
a group placed on the US terrorist listwhich has in the
past included both the African National Congress and the Irish
Republican Armyor associating in any way with its members.
The law as it was written blurs the line between protected
expression and unprotected conduct, the three-judge federal
appeals panel ruled. The Bush administration is appealing that
decision.
In another ruling in Los Angeles US District Court in June,
Judge Robert M. Takasugi threw out charges against six US citizens
arrested for raising funds for the Iranian dissident movement,
the Peoples Mujahadin. He described the AEDPA as unconstitutional
on its face, noting that there is no means to challenge
the designation of a group as terrorist.
Judge Schroeder, who is to render a decision on bail in the
Lackawanna case by October 3, expressed open skepticism about
the governments case. I havent heard of any
acts of violence or a propensity to acts of violence in the history
of these defendants, he said. He went on to question whether
the men had provided support to Al Qaeda, or had merely
received it.
The government has failed to produce any evidence that
indicated any one of these defendants planned, organized, discussed,
articulated or even thought of doing one single bad act to anyone,
whether it be to Americans or someone else, said William
Clauss, a federal public defender representing Goba. If
9/11 means our Constitution has to be set aside because of a speculation
of danger, its not a road we can go down.
The charges against the six men in Lackawanna follow the earlier
detention of two other US citizens as enemy combatants,
whom the Bush administration claims it can hold indefinitely without
charges, denying them the right to either hearings or legal counsel.
Reports have surfaced in the media of plans for detention camps
for citizens labeled enemy combatants, a designation
that the administration claims it can make by decree, without
any legal recourse for those charged as such.
What began in the wake of September 11 with the mass roundup
of some 1,200 immigrants based solely on their ethnic or religious
backgroundnone of whom were charged with any terror-related
crimehas now developed into a systematic attempt by the
administration to utilize extraordinary and extra-constitutional
legal powers to lock up US citizens.
The Bush administration is deliberately pursuing its purported
war on terrorism on two fronts. While preparing a
war of aggression abroad, it anticipates growing unrest at home,
both in response to war itself and as result of its social policies,
the disintegrating economy and the widening chasm between wealth
and poverty.
Hence the Justice Departments description of the Lackawanna
defendants as members of a terrorist sleeper cell.
The Bush administration claims that many such cells exist within
the US, including both citizens and non-citizens. Such allegations
are designed to sow fear and panic and create the environment
for a political witch-hunt against political opponents of the
government.
The use of the 1996 anti-terrorism measure in the Lackawanna
case, just as the earlier detention of alleged enemy combatants,
is establishing legal precedents for a wholesale abrogation of
fundamental democratic rights and the unleashing of unprecedented
state repression.
See Also:
One year since September 11: an unprecedented
assault on democratic rights
[11 September 2002]
Bush presses ahead with enemy
combatant detentions
[16 August 2002]
Bush administration moves
to stifle discovery in 9/11 lawsuits
[2 August 2002]
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