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"Presumption of Guilt," the 2007 Report on the status of Muslims in America is
released June
13, 2007: A report released today by a prominent national Islamic civil rights
and advocacy group indicates a 25 percent increase in the total number of
complaints of anti-Muslim bias from 2005 to 2006, with citizenship delays being
the major issue.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations' (CAIR)
report - the only annual study of its kind - outlines 2,467 incidents and
experiences of anti-Muslim violence, discrimination and harassment in 2006, the
highest number of civil rights cases ever recorded in the Washington-based
group's report. (Hundreds of anti-Muslim incidents reported immediately
following the 9/11 attacks were detailed in a separate report.)
According to the study, called "Presumption of Guilt," that total is a
25.1 percent increase over the preceding year's total of 1,972 cases. One of the
most significant increases is in the category dealing with government agencies,
which rose sharply from 19.22 percent of total reports in 2005 to 36.32 percent
in 2006. This increase was due primarily to the number of cases related to
immigration issues such as citizenship and naturalization delays.
CAIR also received 167 reports of anti-Muslim hate crime complaints, a 9.2
percent increase from the 153 complaints received in 2005.
Nine states and the District of Columbia accounted for almost 81 percent of all
civil rights complaints to CAIR in 2006. They include (in descending order):
California (29 percent), Illinois (13 percent), District of Columbia (7
percent), Florida (7 percent), Texas (6 percent), New York (5 percent), Virginia
(4 percent), Michigan (3 percent), New Jersey (3 percent) and Ohio (3 percent).
This year, most categories of reported cases remained relatively unchanged from
last year's report. There were a few decreases, in both real and proportional
terms, in certain categories from the previous year. For example, civil rights
complaints involving the workplace declined significantly from 25.41 percent in
2005 to 15.57 percent in 2006.
In the report, CAIR offers public policy recommendations to address anti-Muslim
sentiments in American society. Those recommendations include: 1) asking elected
representatives and religious and community leaders to speak out strongly
against Islamophobia and to repudiate anti-Muslim bigots, 2) urging American
Muslims to increase outreach and education efforts, 3) holding congressional
hearings on the rising level of Islamophobia in America, 4) expediting the
processing of citizenship/naturalization applications, and 5) adopting domestic
and foreign polices that reflect American traditions of justice and respect for
the human dignity of all people.
To view the entire report, go to:
http://www.cair.com/pdf/2007-Civil-Rights-Report.pdf
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