- A personal note. I've twice before written about Al-Arian
and discussed his case on my radio program with his wife and daughter.
Since February 20, 2003, he's been unjustly imprisoned. The FBI hounded
him for 11 years. It falsely accused him of backing organizations fronting
for Palestinian Islamic Jihad - a 1997 State Department-designated "Foreign
Terrorist Organization (FTO)." It's one of 30 organizations so-designated
that year. In 1999, three were removed. Another was added in 2001 for a
total of 28. Sixteen of them are Arabic/Muslim and include Hamas, the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Hezbollah and Al Queda. Their ideologies
differ from western standards. Washington thus calls them FTOs that "engage
in terrorist activity (and) threaten the security of US nationals or the
national security of the US."
-
- In August 2001, Palestinian Islamic Jihad's (PIJ) General
Secretary, Dr. Fathi Shikaki, agreed to be interviewed. He called the organization
"an independent, Islamic, and popular movement with Islam (advocating)
grassroots popular action and armed struggle (for the) liberation of (Occupied)
Palestine." In this respect, it's no different from the Vichy French
resistance. They were renown freedom fighters. So were the Mujahideen (when
they were on our side) against the Soviets in Afghanistan and Serbia in
the Balkans.
-
- As Michel Chossudovsky noted in a September 2001 Global
Research.ca article titled "Who is Osama Bin Laden?:" ....while
the Islamic Jihad - featured by the Bush administration as "a threat
to America" - is blamed for the (9/11 attacks), these same Islamic
organizations constitute a key instrument of US military intelligence in
the Balkans and the former Soviet Union." In other words, they're
(unwittingly) used to further US interests and at the same time justify
Washington's war on Islam (aka the "war on terrorism").
-
- Shikaki denied that PIJ or the Islamic Jihad Movement
(IJM) practice "terrorism." On the contrary, "terrorism
is practiced by a state (Israel) that is fully supported by the West. (It
and especially America back) dictatorial regimes that are tyrannical, oppressive
and practice human rights abuses on massive scales....Tens of thousands
of Islamists have been arrested and....held under severe conditions."
However, "only a small segment used violence against the state-sponsored
and state-supported violence."
-
- How can Palestinians be called terrorists. We "scream
from pain and suffering and (are) defending (our) land against Jewish soldiers....We
are calling for peace based on justice, rights and dignity. We must be
dealt with as equals and as carriers of a great civilization. Only then
will peace prevail in our region and the whole world....Our state is Palestine....As
for the Jews, they have lived peacefully with us for centuries....They
could (always) live among us freely, but not as a political entity....We
don't espouse throwing the Jews into the sea (but) there will be no peace
unless Palestine is returned to the Palestinians."
-
- Al-Arian: Falsely Targeted For Supporting "Terrorism"
-
- Because of his faith, ethnicity, political activism and
prominence, Al-Arian became a prime target. He was falsely vilified for
supporting terrorism. Then at the behest of Governor Jeb Bush and despite
his tenured status, the University of South Florida fired him following
his February 20, 2003 arrest. Ever since, he's been imprisoned and held
in brutalizing and dehumanizing confinement in over a dozen maximum and
other federal prison facilities. Only his spirit sustains him.
-
- His June 2005 trial was a travesty. It lasted six months,
cost about $50 million, and in the end Al-Arian was exonerated on eight
false terrorism charges. On nine lesser ones, jurors were deadlocked 10
- 2 for acquittal.
-
- Al-Arian is a Palestinian refugee, a distinguished professor
and scholar, community leader and civil activist. His crime - being an
activist Muslim at the wrong time in America. After his exoneration, prosecutors
planned to retry him but instead struck a secret plea bargain with his
lawyers. It stipulated:
-
- -- he neither engaged in or had any knowledge of violent
acts;
-
- -- that he would not be required to cooperate further
with prosecutors;
-
- -- and that he would be released on time served and deported
voluntarily to his country of choice.
-
- He remained in custody pending sentencing and deportation
on May 1, 2006. Yet he's still imprisoned and his ordeal continues. In
October 2006, assistant prosecutor Gordon Kromberg violated plea bargain
terms by subpoenaing Al-Arian before a grand jury. It was to entrap him
on perjury and obstruction of justice charges through clever and manipulative
questioning.
-
- At the time, he said this about all Muslims that should
have automatically disqualified him: "If they can kill each other
during Ramadan, they can appear before the grand jury - all they can't
do is eat before sunset. I believe Mr. Al-Arian's request is part of the
attempted Islamization of the American Justice System. I am not going to
put off (his) grand jury appearance just to assist in what is becoming
the Islamization of America." Following these comments, Al-Arian's
attorney accused Kromberg of anti-Muslim bias and asked him to recuse himself.
He denied the request and called Al-Arian before the grand jury.
-
- He refused to testify and was held in contempt. He refused
again before a newly convened grand jury, was again held in contempt, and
had his sentence extended without mitigation until April 7, 2008. On March
3, 2008 (three weeks before his scheduled release and deportation), Al-Arian
was again ordered to appear before another March 19 grand jury. He again
refused, remained imprisoned, and on June 26 was indicted on two counts
of criminal contempt.
-
- Al-Arian's case is crucially important. It shows the
peril of being Muslim in America. It also represents a disturbing abuse
of the grand jury system before which Al-Arian has no obligation to testify.
It's at a time our constitutional checks and balances have eroded, our
civil liberties are weakest, a president has usurped "unitary executive"
powers to claim the law is what he says it is, and when we teeter on the
edge of tyranny unless these practices are stopped.
-
- Law Professor and Lead Al-Arian Counsel Jonathan Turley
-
- Turley calls Al-Arian's case "a classic perjury
trap used repeatedly by the government to punish those individuals who
could not be convicted before an American jury." All the more so if
you're Muslim, high-profile, and easily exploited for political advantage.
-
- On June 30, Al-Arian was arraigned before Judge Leonie
Brinkema of the US District Court for the Eastern District of Columbia.
Turley was denied the right to meet with him in advance and wasn't prepared
to enter a plea. The Court did it for him - "not guilty." His
trial is scheduled to begin on August 13, 2008.
-
- Turley requested that Al-Arian be released on bail. He's
not charged with terrorism, has no passport, and isn't a flight risk. Since
charges involve contempt, there's no reason to hold him. He's lived in
the country since 1975, has lawful alien status, his children are US citizens,
and they have deep ties here. In addition, citizens have volunteered to
be custodians, and Al-Arian is willing to be continually monitored under
home confinement. Turley calls the government's actions "purely gratuitous
and retaliatory under (these) conditions."
-
- He further requested a bond hearing, and Judge Brinkema
agreed. During his Florida trial, friends offered millions in property
as security. They were denied. Prosecutors asked for a one-day trial. Turley
requested three days and told Judge Brinkema that counsel believes Al-Arian's
indictment is "invalid on its face." He didn't refuse to cooperate.
He'd already given two detailed affidavits establishing that he had no
knowledge of any crimes committed by the International Institute of Islamic
Thought (a Herndon, Virginia think tank) or its officers. He also repeatedly
asked to take a polygraph exam for verification. He was denied.
-
- Turley also explained that the day before his indictment
the government expressed satisfaction with his affidavits. By indicting
him, "the government's long pattern of retaliation against Dr. Al-Arian
has now degraded further into raw thuggery." It has no interest in
truth and justice. It intends to act outside the law by whatever means
it takes to keep an innocent man imprisoned. Al-Arian is now at Alexandria,
VA City Jail awaiting his bond hearing.
-
- On July 10 it was held, and for the first time since
his February 2003 arrest there was good news - at least so far. Over strong
government objections, Judge Brinkema agreed that Al-Arian is not a flight
risk or danger to his community and granted him bail. But it's not over
yet because DOJ is sure to fight it. One possible way according to Turley
- having ICE officials hold him for deportation and keep him imprisoned
until his trial.
-
- Turley cited Judge Brinkema's "significant statements
in the hearing:
-
- -- that she was getting "strange signals" about
this case; that "the government should not be found to have harassed
efforts for another government to accept Dr. Al-Arian under his plea agreement;
-
- -- that the plea agreement still applies and the government
is required to deport him "with expedition;"
-
- -- should ICE resume custody, the deportation provision
would be triggered; and
-
- -- Judge Brinkema wants confirmation that Al-Arian already
gave the government detailed statements and repeatedly offered to take
a polygraph exam to prove his truthfulness.
-
- Prosecutor Kromberg twisted the truth to deny Al-Arian
bail. Turley expertly countered him. The week of July 14 he'll submit pre-trial
motions and (formally) request Al-Arian's release on bail. DOJ will surely
fight it. The case is far from resolved, and according to Turley: "Things
are likely to become stranger still as the government continues its long
campaign to hold Dr. Al-Arian by any means or method. We remain hopeful,
however, that (he'll) be vindicated and (allowed) to leave the country"
as his plea bargain stipulates.
-
- Yassin Aref - Another Muslim Political Prisoner
-
- A personal note. I've twice before written about Aref,
discussed his case with his lawyers on my radio program, and have personal
contact with him in prison. Like others of his faith, he was hunted down,
rounded up, held in detention, kept in isolation, denied bail, restricted
in his right and access to counsel, tried on secret evidence and trumped-up
charges, then convicted in a kangaroo court proceeding and given a long
prison term.
-
- Like Al-Arian and other Muslims, Aref was targeted for
his faith and ethnicity. He's an innocent man and another victim of police
state justice. He's now serving a 15 year sentence at the secret Terre
Haute, Indiana federal penitentiary's Communication Management Unit (CMU).
Opened in December 2006, it's for "high-security risk" Muslim
and Middle Eastern prisoners to limit or cut them off entirely from outside
contact. Doing so violates the Supreme Court's 2004 Johnson v. California
decision and Prison Bureau regulations. However, the courts and Congress
haven't intervened.
-
- Aref appealed on March 24, 2008 before the Second Circuit
Court of Appeals in New York. After the proceeding, one of his pro bono
trial lawyers, Stephen Downs, was hopeful but cautious. He explained that
predicting the outcome was uncertain at best and foolhardy at worst.
-
- On July 2 in United States v. Aref, the (three-judge
panel) Appeals Court rendered a unanimous decision. Aref was denied, and
unless a motion for rehearing or the Supreme Court decides otherwise, he'll
remain imprisoned for 15 years. The Court issued an 11 page summary order
rejecting evidentiary challenges and other defendant claims. Appeals Court
lawyers Terrence Kindlon and Kathy Manley expressed profound disappointment
with Kindlon saying: "I feel like somebody hit me in the face with
a pie....We were feeling some optimism here. We thought there were some
significant issues that dealt not just with the law but with some of the
events that occurred throughout the course of the trial....I can honestly
say I strongly and respectfully disagree with the decision."
-
- A Schenectady, NY columnist, Carl Strock, was also dismayed
and commented: "I thought the arguments (for reversal) were compelling,
but I could hardly imagine an appeals court overturning a jury verdict
in something so sensitive as Muslim terrorism, even if the terrorism was"
bogus. The ruling "means it's OK for the FBI to lure law-abiding citizens
(or legal residents) into doing something illegal" or that government
prosecutors can claim (with secret evidence unavailable to counsel) is
illegal and then arrest, charge and convict them for it. "That's the
long and short of this case."
-
- It's also OK for federal judges to assure jurors that
the government has "good and valid (prosecutorial) reasons" even
when there are none. The same government claimed "valid reasons"
to invade Iraq and Afghanistan. We now know there were none.
-
- Kindlon said he's preparing an en banc motion for rehearing
before the full Appeals Court and a writ of certiorari petition to the
Supreme Court asking it to review the lower court ruling. Winning a reversal
in either court will be daunting given the preponderance of hard right
federal judges on the bench. It shows what all Muslims (and the rest of
us) are up against despite the important Boumedienne v. Bush Supreme Court
decision. It ruled Guantanamo detainees have habeas rights even if they're
not US citizens and are held outside the country. Despite having them,
however, getting justice in US federal courts may prove a bridge too far.
Especially for those targeted as enemies of the state with or without evidence.
-
- Like Al-Arian, Aref is an innocent man. His crime is
being Muslim at the wrong time in America. He committed no crime and was
victimized by an FBI frame. I have direct contact with him in prison. We
exchange letters and occasional emails when he's allowed to send and receive
them. He's a friend and a supremely gracious and decent man. Injustice
to him, Al-Arian and others denies it to everyone. Today we're all Yassin
Arefs and Sami Al-Arians, Boumedienne v. Bush notwithstanding.
-
- "I Am Not Surprised"
-
- On the web site maintained for him (yassinaref.com),
Aref responded to the Appeals Court decision in prose and poetry. Below
are extended excerpts.
-
- "I am not surprised. When they arrested me....I
was shocked the next morning when they took me to court. I was surprised
to see all those police, marshals and media, and I was really confused:
what was all that about? Who am I (to be so important)? What did I do?
What was going on? All of it was unbelievable. I (told) the marshals that
there is a law in this country and I did nothing wrong, so the judge will
free me and let me go back to my family."
-
- He didn't and refused me bail, "claiming I was a
flight risk and danger to the community, even" though I have no "travel
documents and there was 50 cents in my wallet, plus I am stateless and
have no country to go to. Above all, I did nothing wrong (and) have (nothing)
to hide.
-
- Then while....in jail....I understood what was going
on....it's not me, it's politics and discrimination....if I was not a Muslim
and Imam....never would I have been targeted (or) indicted" or tried
without evidence. Even if they" tried me, no "jury (would) find
me guilty," and if they did no judge would accept it. Even if the
judge did, no "appeal court" would go along. "But all of
this happened....because I was a foreigner, a Muslim who had a little beard.
-
- All the government did was misrepresent their evidence
to confuse the court and prevent justice from taking place." Everyone
in the drama played a role. "But still I am happy because I did nothing
wrong and harmed no one....what they did to me is wrong and not fair, and
I believe the truth will never die and people will find it sooner or later."
-
- The government "dishonored justice and humiliated
the Constitution, not me. Anyone who knows me....knows I am innocent."
Knows I'm not "a dangerous wild animal who must be locked down in
an isolated unit. I am just a scapegoat for the (government's wrong policies
and a victim (of) their nonsensical ongoing war." Millions of others
are suffering like me.
-
- "The government....know(s) very well I had nothing
to do with terrorists or (have any) anti-American (beliefs) or (approve
of) violence, and that never in my life did I participate in any fighting
or....support any terrorists....I am just a Muslim and a stateless Kurd....Let
the government celebrate their victory for destroying my family and for
putting an innocent man in prison. Let the media" and appeals court
support what they did. It changes nothing. "I am innocent and did
nothing wrong.
-
- I am grateful for everyone who has supported me, wished
and prayed for the best for me and felt sorry for my family....They cannot
put hate in my heart and revenge in my thoughts. I know it's not over,
and I hope you believe the same and stay firm until justice takes place
and the truth comes out. Please do not forget my family."
-
- We never will Yassin or stop supporting your struggle
for justice. Or other innocent victims like yourself.
-
- For Muslims in America, Their Ordeal Continues
-
- Rumors are circulating about new police state tactics
later this summer - so the DOJ may open new investigations without evidence
of wrongdoing. Merely on the basis of an undisclosed "terrorist profile"
or "pattern of behavior" suggesting suspects should be watched
and interrogated about their Muslim or Arab-connected activities. Other
grounds as well - where they travel as well as their occupation, race
or ethnicity. It means millions of Americans will be targeted at a time
no one's civil liberties are protected. Bogus charges will be brought against
innocent people, and if they're Muslims and called "terrorists"
imagine what little justice they'll get.
-
- Congress won't help either. It gutted the Fourth Amendment
further after both Houses passed and George Bush signed (on July 10) the
FISA Amendments Act of 2008. It's FISA on steroids and more by granting
telecom companies retroactive immunity to conduct warrantless spying post-9/11.
Obama and McCain supported it. So did most others in Congress. Everyone
has reason to fear it. Muslims most of all. They've suffered hugely since
9/11. No letup is in sight. This is how a police state works. Congress,
the courts, and executive are on board. So is his successor. Expect little
change in 2009 and no open public debate. The law of the land is now lawlessness.
No one is safe, and there's no place to hide.
-
- Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre
for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com
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