---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2001 10:49:22 +0200
From: Arjan El Fassed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [AL-AWDA] 5 Israelis detained for `puzzling behavior' after WTC tragedy

5 Israelis detained for `puzzling behavior' after WTC tragedy
By Yossi Melman (Ha'aretz, 17 September 2001)

Five Israelis who had worked for a moving company based in New Jersey are being held 
in U.S. prisons for what the Federal Bureau of Investigation has described as 
"puzzling behavior" following the terror attack on the World Trade Center in New York 
last Tuesday. The five are expected to be deported sometime soon.

The families of the five, who asked that their names not be released, said that their 
sons had been questioned by the FBI for hours on end, had been kept in solitary 
confinement for three days, and had been humiliated, stripped of their clothes and 
blindfolded.

The mother of one of the young men explained the chain of events as she understands it 
to Ha'aretz:

She said that the five had worked for the company, which is owned by an Israeli, for 
between two months and two years. They had been arrested some four hours after the 
attack on the Twin Towers while filming the smoking skyline from the roof of their 
company's building, she said. It appears that they were spotted by one of the 
neighbors who called the police and the FBI.

The mother said that the families and friends of the five in Israel had known nothing 
of the men's whereabouts for a number of days.

"When they finally let my son make a phone call for the first time to a friend in the 
United States two days ago, he told him that he had been tortured by the FBI in a 
basement," the mother said. "He was stripped to his underwear; he was blindfolded and 
questioned for 14 hours. They thought that because he has citizenship of a European 
country as well as of Israel that he was working for the Mossad [Israel's secret 
service]."

Seven FBI agents later stormed the apartment of one of the Israelis, searched it and 
questioned his roommate. The Israeli owner of the company, who has U.S. citizenship, 
was also questioned. Both men were subsequently released.

The families here complained that the Israeli consulate in New York and the situation 
room set up by the Foreign Ministry there to locate missing Israelis had done nothing 
to help their sons. The Foreign Ministry told the families that the FBI had denied 
holding the five and that the consulate had chosen to believe the FBI, the mother said.

The five were transferred out of the FBI's facility on Saturday morning and are now 
being held in two prisons in New Jersey by the Immigration and Naturalization 
Services. They are charged with illegally residing in the United States and working 
there without permits.

The Foreign Ministry said in response that it had been informed by the consulate in 
New York that the FBI had arrested the five for "puzzling behavior." They are said to 
have had been caught videotaping the disaster and shouting in what was interpreted as 
cries of joy and mockery.



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