|
By SAMANTHA HENRY – May 4, 2009 , The
Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Mohammad Qatanani's mosque was full of
FBI agents the night before he was to find out if he would be
deported.
But even though the federal government was trying to link
Qatanani to foreign extremists, the agents weren't there to keep
an eye on him. They wanted to show their support for a Muslim
leader they considered a valued ally for the relationships he
helped forge between the FBI and Muslims in the wake of 9/11.
Across the nation, such grass-roots relationships between
Muslims and the federal government are in jeopardy. A coalition
of Muslim groups is calling for Muslims to stop cooperating with
the FBI — not on national security or safety issues but on
community outreach.
The coalition is upset over what it says is increasing
government surveillance in mosques, new Justice Department
guidelines that the groups say encourage profiling, and the
FBI's recent suspension of ties with the nation's largest Muslim
civil rights group, the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
A petition that opposes FBI tactics is circulating in Muslim
communities and has been gaining support, said coalition
chairman Agha Saeed. The coalition, represented by the American
Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and Elections, has requested a
meeting with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to discuss what
it sees as the deteriorating relationship between the FBI and
Muslim communities.
"We have to decide what we're doing as a country. If it's not
a war on Islam, then these practices must be stopped," Saeed
said. "We're not asking for special treatment, just equal
treatment."
A number of Muslim groups — including some of the nation's
most prominent — have declined to sign the petition. Other
organizations say they agree with parts of the petition but also
support ongoing dialogue with law enforcement.
FBI spokesman John Miller said the agency values its
relationships with Muslims and has worked hard on outreach
efforts that range from town hall meetings to diversity training
for FBI agents.
"I think a lot of these inaccurate statements and claims have
the potential to do damage to those relationships," Miller said.
"What we've suggested to the major (Muslim) groups is that we
try to separate the real issues from the sound bites, and if we
can identify those real issues, tackle them together."
Supporters of the petition cite recent cases in California
and Michigan where the FBI has been accused of using informants
and coercive tactics to spy on mosques.
A federal judge in California ordered a review last week of
FBI inquiries into several Muslim groups and activists who claim
they have been unfairly spied on and questioned. A Muslim
organization in Detroit asked Holder in mid-April to investigate
complaints that the FBI asked mosque attendees to spy on Islamic
leaders and worshippers.
Miller said there is no factual basis for claims the FBI
infiltrates mosques or conducts blanket surveillance of Muslim
leaders.
"Based on information of a threat of violence or a crime, we
investigate individuals, and those investigations may take us to
the places those individual go," Miller said.
Miller questioned the timing of the petition, noting that it
comes after the FBI suspended ties with CAIR, partly because it
was named as an unindicted coconspirator in the case against the
Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development — a group
charged with bankrolling schools and social welfare programs the
U.S. government says are controlled by Hamas.
Afsheen Shamsi, a spokeswoman for CAIR's New Jersey chapter,
dismissed the idea that the petition is retaliation. She said it
reflects the concerns of Muslims who have grown tired of being
stopped at airports, constant questioning and relentless
scrutiny eight years after the attacks of Sept. 11.
"I believe the Muslim community is questioning whether the
mosque visits and the handshakes are just a big show by the FBI,
while behind the scenes, they continue to engage in questionable
practices," she said.
The petition is gaining little traction in New Jersey, home
to one of the nation's largest concentrations of Muslims, and a
place where relationships between Muslims and law enforcement
were heavily tested in the aftermath of 9/11.
New Jersey lost 744 residents in the attacks; many Muslims
were among the victims. Several of the 9/11 hijackers had lived
in Paterson for a time, and many Muslims detained after the
attacks were held in New Jersey jails.
But Muslim leaders say the FBI distinguished itself by
reaching out to Muslims, Arab Americans and groups like Sikhs in
the wake of 9/11. Relationships forged between the FBI and
Muslim leaders in New Jersey have endured since.
At Qatanani's mosque in Paterson after 9/11, the imam invited
FBI agents to lecture congregants on how to recognize
terrorists. Qatanani also helped train FBI agents on how to deal
respectfully with Muslim detainees and community members.
When Qatanani became the subject of a high-profile
deportation case last year, several high-ranking law enforcement
officials took the stand on his behalf.
Aref Assaf, a mosque member and supporter of Qatanani who
heads the Paterson-based American Arab Forum, say despite the
imam's immigration ordeal, he has urged his supporters not to
sever ties with federal law enforcement. When the petition came
up at a recent meeting of New Jersey Muslim leaders, Assaf said
many declined to sign it.
"I'm a believer that law enforcement does not have a built-in
anti-Muslim policy," he said.
"I know from dealing with FBI leaders they have been very
forceful in their expressions of solidarity with our faith and
culture, but there is a line, where we have to accept that as
part of our dealings with them, they have a job to do, to make
sure there are no terrorists in our midst or anywhere else."
Agha Saeed says relationships between the FBI and Muslims in
other parts of the country have been more one-sided.
"There was a sense of mutuality at first. ... These local
connections people made, they wanted to see it as working with
law enforcement and making the community better," he said. "I am
stupefied by the fact that they (the FBI) are burning down the
bridges that they need."
Copyright © 2009 The
Associated Press. All rights reserved.
|