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bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful



=== News Update ===

1 Man Still Locked Up From 9/11 Sweeps

Oct 14, 8:03 PM (ET)

By MARTHA MENDOZA


In a jail cell at an immigration detention center in Arizona sits a man who 
is not charged with a crime, not suspected of a crime, not considered a 
danger to society.

But he has been in custody for five years.

His name is Ali Partovi. And according to the Department of Homeland 
Security, he is the last to be held of about 1,200 Arab and Muslim men 
swept up by authorities in the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, 
terror attacks.

There has been no full accounting of all of these individuals. Nor has a 
promised federal policy to protect against unrestricted sweeps been produced.

Human rights groups tried to track the detainees; members of Congress 
denounced the arrests. They all believed that all of those who had been 
arrested had been deported, released or processed through the criminal 
justice system.

Just this summer, it was reported that an Algerian man, Benemar "Ben" 
Benatta, was the last detainee, and that his transfer to Canada had closed 
the book on the post-9/11 sweeps.

But now The Associated Press has learned that at least one person - Partovi 
- is still being held. The Department of Homeland Security insists he 
really is the last one in custody.

"Certainly it's not our goal as an agency to keep anyone detained 
indefinitely," said DHS spokesman Dean Boyd. Boyd said the department would 
like to remove Partovi from the United States but that he refuses to return 
to his homeland of Iran.

And so he remains, a curious remnant of a desperate time.

---

Within hours of the Sept. 11 attacks - before it was even clear if they 
were over - the FBI was ordered to identify the terrorists who had managed 
to slip so smoothly into American society and to catch anyone who might 
have been working with them. The FBI operation was called PENTTBOM; it was 
swift and fierce, and the stakes couldn't have been higher.

When in doubt, the orders came, arrest now and ask questions later. To make 
this easier, law enforcement officials were authorized to use immigration 
charges as needed. The risk of allowing terrorists to slip away just 
because there wasn't ample evidence to hold them on terror charges could 
not be tolerated. And thus hundreds of individuals who were not terrorists, 
nor associated with terrorists, were temporarily taken into city, county 
and federal custody.

They were caught in their bedrooms while they slept, pulled from the 
restaurant kitchens where they worked, stopped at the border, even federal 
offices where they had gone to seek help. In the end, then-Attorney General 
John Ashcroft's call for "aggressive detentions" in the unprecedented 
sweeps netted more than 1,200 individuals in less than two months.

The initial reaction to the sweeps was confusion. Members of Congress, 
leading civil rights organizations, Arab and Muslim activists, even the 
Justice Department's internal watchdogs, didn't know how to react.

"After 9/11, everyone was caught off guard. There was so much secrecy 
surrounding the government's policies that it took a number of months 
before the public and civil-liberties groups began unraveling what the 
government was doing," said Lee Gelernt, an American Civil Liberties Union 
attorney.

Then came demands, from Congress, from the Justice Department's Inspector 
General, from the ACLU and Human Rights Watch and from Arab and Muslim 
activists, that these individuals must be accounted for.

To date that hasn't occurred.

"The fact is the United States has not come forward with information on 
what happened to these people, or released their names," said Rachel 
Meeropol, a staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, an 
advocacy organization that represents several detainees being held in 
Guantanamo. "Our understanding is that the majority of these people who 
were swept up on immigration violations were then held in detention until 
they were cleared of any connection to terrorism. We believe that accounts 
for the vast majority of people who were swept up."

Here's what is known: 762 of the 1,200 PENTTBOM arrestees were charged with 
immigration violations at the behest of the FBI because agents thought they 
might be associated with terrorism. Partovi was one of these 762. Much as 
Partovi used a false passport, nearly all of these detainees had violated 
immigration laws, either by overstaying their visas, entering the country 
illegally, or violating some other immigration law.

Unlike Partovi, almost everyone was either deported or released within a 
few months.

There were still at least 438 other individuals who were not accounted for. 
Most of those individuals, said Justice Department officials, were released 
within days. But at least 93 were charged with federal crimes and processed 
through the courts, and an unknown number were deemed material witnesses.

As the years passed, said the ACLU's Gelernt, public concern faded.

"Initially there was a lot of attention on the 1,200 people, but we're 
still not sure exactly what happened to all of them," said the ACLU's Gelernt.

The repercussions are still being felt, say advocates.

"Those 1,200 were taken in on pseudo-immigration charges," said Jennifer 
Daskal of Human Rights Watch. "It really is a black mark on the U.S. and it 
undermines our intelligence gathering because it creates distrust between 
law enforcement officials and communities where those officials should be 
building rapport and trust."

"People lost years of their lives and families were ripped apart in the 
frenzy of fear," said Kerri Sherlock, director of policy and planning at 
the Rights Working Group, an advocacy organization in Washington D.C. "Do 
we really want to be a country that locks people up without guaranteeing 
their basic constitutional rights?"

---

In June 2003, the Justice Department's inspector general, an in-house 
auditor, found widespread abuses in the way immigration laws were used to 
hold people suspected of terrorism in the months following 9/11. The 
inspector general made 21 recommendations aimed at protecting individuals' 
civil rights. Twenty of those recommendations have been adopted.

The last recommendation calls for the Justice Department and the Department 
of Homeland Security to formalize policies, responsibilities, and 
procedures for managing a national emergency that involves alien detainees. 
After the inspector general's report, the Justice and Homeland Security 
departments agreed with the recommendation and began negotiating over 
language. Officials at both departments say those negotiations are still 
going on.

"The Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice continue 
to work toward the development of formal joint policies and approaches for 
the handling of such national security cases during periods of national 
impact," said Homeland Security Department spokesman Dean Boyd.

However, Boyd stressed that guidelines were set up in 2004 to make sure 
detainees' rights are being protected on a case-by-case basis.

"We learned from the past," he said. "We evaluate each situation to make 
sure it's being handled fairly."

Tim Lynch, a lawyer with the libertarian think tank Cato Institute, said 
guidelines are not enough.

"I don't think the guidelines will mean very much in an emergency if they 
don't have the binding force of law," he said. "We shouldn't be surprised 
if those guidelines aren't followed if there's another massive attack."

---

When the AP wrote Ali Partovi to ask for an interview, he called collect 
from the Florence Correctional Center, a privately run detention center in 
Arizona where he is held. Adamantly, he said he did not want to be 
interviewed and that he wanted to remain private, even though he said 
understood his case files, including litigation he files himself, are part 
of the public record.

He later reportedly told a public affairs officer at the facility that he 
is too busy for an interview - perhaps preparing his many legal appeals.

In his lawsuits - there have been seven so far - Partovi claims he is a 
victim of civil rights abuses and demands between $5 million and $10 
million in restitution. The most recent was filed in July.

The staff at the jail where he was first held "poured hot coffee on my 
body, they also poured cold ice water on my body," he wrote in one, 
claiming that staffers also cuffed his hands and feet, which caused "my 
ankle and lower extremities to swell abnormally."

"It is my firm belief that I am constantly subjected to physical abuse 
(because) of my ethnicity, I am Iranian of Persian birth," he wrote in 
another, filed this summer. In that lawsuit he claimed that immigration 
officers forced him to kneel while handcuffed, and then kicked and punched 
his stomach and kidneys.

"As you can imagine, this is very, very painful when you are cuffed from 
behind," he wrote.

A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney said that office was aware of the 
lawsuits but could not comment on them. A detention center spokesman said 
he was not aware of any lawsuits and could not respond.

Partovi doesn't have a lawyer, and he told the AP he doesn't want one, 
choosing instead to represent himself, gleaning expertise from the prison 
library.

He did have a lawyer once, when he was arrested in Guam in the fall of 
2001, trying to enter the country on a fraudulent Italian passport.

"Mr. Partovi came into Guam International Airport using a false passport. 
He explained about having been married to a Japanese women and the 
arrangement wasn't working out. He applied for political asylum, and I 
believe the federal government thought he might be a terror suspect," said 
Curtis Charles Van de Veld, who was hired by the federal government to 
represent him.

Partovi was sentenced to 175 days in custody, which he had already served 
by the time he pleaded guilty in 2002. Then he was turned over to the 
Department of Homeland Security.

Until the AP contacted him, Van de Veld didn't realize his former client 
was still in custody.

"I'm surprised he hasn't contacted me," he said.

source:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20061015/D8KONLJ80.html

===



-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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