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Statement
by the on the Arrest of Professor Sami Al-Arian
Blue Triangle Network
The
Blue Triangle Network expresses grave concern over the arrest of
Professor Sami Al-Arian in Tampa, Florida and four others on terrorism-related
allegations. Professor Al-Arian has undertaken a hunger strike in
jail to protest his arrest, and this too is a cause for concern.
After
his arrest, Al-Arian made this statement:
"I'm crucified today because of who I am: a stateless Palestinian,
an Arab, a Muslim, an outspoken advocate for Palestinian rights,
but more significantly a persistent defender of civil and constitutional
rights on the home front."
Whether
or not the government is able to prove that Professor Al-Arian,
or the others indicted, carried out any of the specific acts of
which they are accused, the central issue here is this: the unlimited
power of the government to single out a person for his or her political
stance, conduct unlimited covert surveillance and then bring criminal
charges. To be blunt, that is just what a police state looks like.
Professor
Al-Arian has been the target of U.S. government surveillance for
15 years, during which time he was known as a vocal supporter of
Palestinian rights. He also attracted government attention because
of his participation in the campaign against the use of secret evidence
as a tool to detain Muslim and Arab immigrants in the years before
Sept. 11, 2001. In the period since 9/11, Professor Al-Arian became
an outspoken and eloquent critic of the attacks on civil liberties
and attacks on Muslim, Arab and South Asian immigrants that were
carried out by the U.S. Government.
Immediately
after Sept. 11, 2001, Professor Al-Arian was suspended from his
University of South Florida position because of his political views.
Unsubstantiated accusations were made that alleged he was connected
with Palestinian groups which had been labeled as "terrorist"
by the U.S. government. In particular, he was singled out for using
the phrase "death to Israel" during a speech. It is a
long established standard in the U.S. legal system that such political
advocacy is protected free speech. In the past few months, he had
won some victories in his court fights to prevent the University
from firing him.
After
15 years of surveillance, the government had not been able to bring
any criminal charges against Professor Al-Arian. Now come the indictments
and arrests of February 20.
The
indictment against Al-Arian details political statements and political
activity over the years. For example, the indictment states he attended
an April 7, 1991 conference in Cleveland, Ohio and that allegedly
"SAMI AMIN AL-ARIAN further mentioned the Gulf War, and questioned
why they stopped the protests against it. He then said they should
continue the protests, continue to damn America, continue to damn
Israel, and continue to damn the allies of America and Israel until
death." (It should also be pointed out that while the indictments
of Professor Al-Arian and the others have been handed down in the
name of U.S. national security, the things they are accused of doing
were entirely focused in Palestine and Israel.) We must ask, why
are perfectly legal political speech and activities listed in a
criminal indictment? What is this meant to prove?
The
government is basing its indictments on alleged evidence gathered
from wiretaps authorized by the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court. This is a court which meets in secret and whose proceedings
are totally unknown to the subjects of its deliberations. For 25
years any information gathered by these wiretaps could not be used
in a criminal case. This was because, until late last year, these
wiretaps had been supposedly for counterintelligence purposes, i.e.
for spying on people who the government said were spying on the
U.S., and not for gathering evidence for criminal prosecutions.
The constitutional standards that apply in criminal courts and which
must be met to obtain the wiretaps, did not apply. Late last year
a secret appeals court ruled that this information could now be
used as "evidence" in criminal cases. The government says
it can now use the "evidence" gathered over the last 15
years against Professor Al-Arian.
What
does this mean in reality? A secret court can authorize secret surveillance
that will be used to collect secret evidence based only on the government's
claim that someone is "working as an agent of a foreign power."
There is absolutely no requirement, as in a criminal court, to present
factual evidence that a crime has been committed or is about to
be committed in order to obtain a wiretap. Instead, the government
can place people under electronic surveillance permanently without
claiming that they have evidence of criminal activity.
What
is wrong with this picture? Why is it legitimate for there to be
a separate legal system that applies completely different standards
of rights and justice towards anyone the government wants to label
as a "terrorist?"
Under
this system there is no protection for people targeted in this way.
The restrictions on government spying on people inside this country
that were put into place in the past were necessary because it had
been shown that the government often blatantly fabricated "evidence"
against opponents of its actions. The FBI's plots against leaders
and organizations in the people's movements of the 1960's are well
documented. The surveillance and disinformation campaigns waged
against Martin Luther King, Jr., the Black Panther Party and the
anti-war movement were also justified as necessary for "national
security."
This
has a double chilling effect. It is a warning to all political activists,
as White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer stated after 9/11,
"People have to watch what they say and watch what they do."
It is also a threat to people from other countries that they may
face criminal charges in the U.S. if they carry out political opposition
to U.S.actions around the world while they are here.
These
methods have been directed against Muslim, Arab and South Asian
immigrants in the U.S. in a wholesale dismantling of civil liberties.
These are all measures, which, in effect, portray the Muslim, Arab
and South Asian immigrants in this country as "the enemy within."
They have made the very fact of being a Muslim cause for suspicion
by law enforcement, government officials and uninformed citizens.
This demonization has produced calls for mass detentions of Arab-Americans
similar to the rounding up of Japanese-Americans in 1942. Such alarming
proposals have been expressed by government officials and elected
representatives such as U.S. Civil Rights Commissioner Kirsanow
and U.S. Congressman Coble.
This
is cause for serious alarm for all those concerned with protecting
civil liberties and stopping the repression being directed against
Muslim, Arab and South Asian immigrants.
Signed
by:
Blue Triangle Network
Solidarity-USA
To
add your organization or individual name to this statement, please
reply to: NationalOffice@bluetriangle.org Blue Triangle Network
P.O. Box 7451, Dearborn, MI 48121-7451
(313) 942-7187
God
Bless.
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