Ivo Skoric on Wed, 31 Oct 2001 19:25:04 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: MW-10 & 'Racial Profiling' and Terrorism and the face of anthrax |
Miroslav asks: "How many white men were questioned before the nailed Tim?" My answer: Not enough! And the anthrax may be from domestic origins! Don't you remember the Larry Wayne Harris (his white face attached to this message) case? Check this out: http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991490 Meanwhile, it sucks to be a young, male and Arab these days in Texas, doesn't it? But the example of Israeli-Arab solidarity at the bottom of the following article is quite touching. It opens new roads to conflict resolution between them: just put them in the US prison together! -/- DETAINEES FACE RIGHTS VIOLATIONS In the nation's jails, some of the 700 detained in the sweep following the Sept. 11 attacks endure beatings, are denied access to lawyers and otherwise deprived of their rights, according to attorneys and civil rights organizations, the Los Angeles Times reported Oct. 15. It is unlikely any of the detainees played a role in the 9-11 attacks, and officials admit only a few are linked to the investigation. The vast majority were arrested on visa violations or minor local charges, and would normally have been released by now. But the government is holding them under emergency anti-terrorist powers. Writes the LA Times: "Because of the extraordinary level of secrecy surrounding the investigation, it is impossible to determine how many individuals may have been mistreated. Federal authorities refuse to disclose even the number of people in custody... The Times contacted more than 20 defense lawyers and civil rights monitors. In every case, the lawyers complained that their clients were being held too long and, almost always, said their clients had suffered some kind of mistreatment or undue hardship." In Texas, a Saudi Arabian man was deprived of a mattress, blanket and a clock to let him know when to recite his prayers, his lawyer says. In Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana, immigration officials cut off all lawyer visits and phone calls for detainees the week following the attacks--a directive authorities now say was mishandled. Dennis Clare, a lawyer in Louisville, Ky., said 40 men from Mauritania were picked up near Cincinnati on immigration violations two weeks after Sept. 11. Authorities targeted the group because one supposedly was a pilot. Three are still being held, and have been moved several times to jails in Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and Louisiana. "They don't speak English," Clare said. "They are begging to get out of jail." Hasnain Javed, 20, a Pakistani student who was picked up Sept. 19 at the bus station in Mobile, Ala., on his way back to New York from Houston, was repeatedly beaten by inmates at the county jail in Wiggins, MS, which houses INS detainees under a federal contract. He says guards ignored his pleas for help, and has suffered a chipped tooth and partial hearing loss in one ear. Released after three days in custody, he told the LA Times: "I did not do anything and I don't think anyone had a right to treat me the way I was treated." Stone County Sheriff Mike Ballard, who runs the Wiggins jail, insisted "we did everything we could do" to help Javed, and claimed he "was making derogatory comments about the United States." The FBI is investigating the incident. Egyptian immigrant Mohammed Maddy, a ticket-taker at New York's Kennedy Airport, was picked up Oct. 3 and charged with sneaking his wife and children past security there. At a federal detention hearing, his attorney, Justine Harris, complained Maddy was injured by guards at Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center: "The defendant showed me a very large bruise which he has on the upper part of his arm, which he claims was a result of mistreatment by the guards." The Washington Post reported Oct. 16, "an unknown number of men with Middle Eastern names are being held in solitary confinement" at Manhattan's Metropolitan Correctional Center, "locked in 8-by-10-foot cells with little more than cots, thin blankets and, if they request it, copies of the Koran... They have no contact with each other or their families and limited access to their lawyers. Their names appear on no federal jail log available to the public. No records can be found in any court docket in New York showing why they are detained, who represents them or the status of their cases." Asked American Civil Liberties Union legal director Steven Shapiro: "How many are being held? On what basis? What kind of judicial review is available?" Yazeed Al-Salmi, 23, a Saudi student who missed three weeks of school and was evicted from his San Diego apartment during his 17-day detention, called the experience terrifying. "They don't call you by name... They call you [expletive] terrorist," he said of guards at the Manhattan facility. Al-Salmi was released after testifying for two hours before a federal grand jury on his encounters with one 9-11 hijacker. Attorney General John Ashcroft told ABC's "Nightline" the government's actions are "consistent with the framework of law that we operate under." ISRAELIS DETAINED WITH ARABS IN ANTI-TERROR SWEEP Five young Israelis detained by the FBI Sept. 11 are still being held in Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center. The men were picked up at 6 PM in a van on the George Washington Bridge, and the incident may have been the source of widespread but false New York media reports that evening that a bomb had been found on the bridge. The incident was sparked when a New Jersey woman called police to report a group of men standing on top of a van near the bridge "speaking in a foreign language and hugging each other," reported New York's Jewish weekly, The Forward, Oct. 19. The paper quoted Ido Aharoni of the Israeli consulate saying they were hugging each other in grief, not jubilation. "Obviously, they have nothing to do with the bombing... I think it was just a tragic combination of miscommunication and awkward coincidence." The men, aged 20 through 27, worked for a local moving company, and are being held on visa violations. Their attorney, Steven Gordon, protested that they have been subjected to blindfolding, forced polygraph tests and a blackout of information on their rights. He also said non-Muslim inmates "physically threatened" them after Muslim prisoners pressured them to join in a hunger strike. ivo Date sent: Tue, 30 Oct 2001 23:13:54 -0500 Send reply to: International Justice Watch Discussion List <JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU> From: Miroslav Visic <visic@PIPELINE.COM> Organization: New World Disorder Subject: Re: MW-10 & 'Racial Profiling' and Terrorism To: JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU How many white men were questioned before the nailed Tim? Did they complain about being questioned for being white? Of course not. If these Arabs did nothing wrong, will go free. Where does FBI have to go for info? Taliban? Give-me-a-break. This is not little 'political correctness' game anymore - this is a serious struggle against terrorism. It is the terrorists who are hijacking your and mine civil liberties. I know Bush, Aschroft, etc are bad and mean men, but when anthrax is flying around I don't want to be PC. I want to be safe. Margarita Lacabe wrote: > On Tue, 30 Oct 2001, Miroslav Visic wrote: > > > Oh, please. I am disappointed that only 1000 suspects are being questioned. > > This is not what you in PC jargon call "racial profiling". This is how you > > fight the terrorism. It's normal and it might not be the cleanes way, but > > it is the only way. Just as you fight the smallpox with quarantine, you > > fight terrorism with profiling. Here is how some people see it. > > how some people from extreme right that is - who can't see beyond their > noses and who show a huge degree of racism themselves. As it has been > pointed out often, domestic terrorism by the likes of Mc Veigh did not > lead to the targetting of white, anglo, ex-military men, Waco (or the > abortion clinic bombings) did not lead to the targetting of fundamentalist > christians and there is no reason, other than contemptible racism, than > Sep. 11 should lead to the targetting of Arabs. > > Margarita Lacabe - Derechos - marga@derechos.org - http://www.derechos.org/ > ____________________________________________________________________________ > > Do you want to talk about human rights issues? > Ask a question in real time? Log into our chat room! > http://www.derechos.net/chat/
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