-Caveat Lector-

                          Rights Groups Say US Anti-
                          Terrorism Law Goes
                          'Light Years' Too Far
                                             By Jim Lobe
                                            OneWorld.net
                                               10-29-1

                       United States civil liberties and immigrant rights groups are
                       charging that a new anti-terrorist bill signed into law by 
President
                       George W. Bush Friday threatens the constitutional rights of
                       citizens and non-U.S. residents.

                       The bill, which was passed by the Senate 98-1 yesterday, grants
                       federal authorities sweeping new surveillance and detention
                       powers in suspected terrorism cases, including the power to hold
                       non-U.S. citizens virtually indefinitely with very limited 
judicial
                       review.

                       "This bill goes light years beyond what is necessary to combat
                       terrorism," said Laura Murphy, director of the Washington 
office of
                       the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). "Included in the 
bill are
                       provisions that would allow for the mistreatment of immigrants, 
the
                       suppression of dissent, and the investigation and surveillance 
of
                       wholly innocent Americans."

                       The bill, drawn up in the immediate aftermath of the devastating
                       September 11 attacks on New York and the Pentagon, was
                       approved by the House of Representatives earlier this week by a
                       vote of 357-66. Most lawmakers who opposed the measure
                       echoed complaints made by the ACLU and other rights groups.

                       This week's swift legislative action followed protracted 
negotiations
                       on Capitol Hill aimed at reaching a carefully drawn 
anti-terrorist
                       package. But, amid the anthrax scare which has dominated news
                       in Washington in recent days, a compromise proposal worked out
                       in the House was cast aside in favor of the tougher,
                       administration-backed bill.

                       Noting that the final version was sent to the floor at a time 
when
                       many lawmakers and their staffs could not even access their
                       offices--which were closed off by public-health authorities
                       investigating anthrax contamination--the ACLU called this week's
                       votes "deeply flawed and an offence to the thoughtful 
legislative
                       process necessary to protect the Constitution and the Bill of
                       Rights."

                       The groups are particularly alarmed by provisions which greatly
                       expand the ability of law enforcement authorities to wiretap
                       phones, faxes, and other electronic devices, monitor computer
                       email, and obtain personal information of terrorism suspects 
with a
                       minimum of judicial review.

                       In a bid to reassure critics, the bill's sponsors agreed to a 
"sunset"
                       provision by which these powers will end in four years unless
                       Congress votes to extend them.

                       Of even greater concern are provisions affecting non-citizens.
                       Under the new law, the attorney general may detain non-citizens
                       suspected of terrorism for seven days without a hearing before
                       either charging them with a crime or releasing them. If they are
                       found to have violated even a technical provision of immigration
                       laws, they may be deported immediately or detained 
indefinitely, if
                       the attorney-general certifies that they may threaten national
                       security.

                       "This unprecedented power can be used against any non-citizen
                       about whom the Attorney General has no more than a mere
                       suspicion of involvement in terrorist activity, a level of 
suspicion
                       that ordinarily would justify only a brief stop and frisk on the
                       street." said Elisa Massimino, director of the Washington 
office of
                       the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights.

                       "Now it can result in a virtual life sentence, and the bill 
provides
                       only the barest of judicial oversight of the Attorney General's 
new
                       power," she added.

                       Since the September 11 attacks, almost 1,000
                       non-citizens--virtually all of them of Arab or South Asian
                       descent--have been rounded up and detained by law enforcement
                       authorities in a sweep which has drawn concern from Amnesty
                       International, among other human rights groups. One 55-year-old
                       Pakistani detainee held in a New Jersey jail for more than a 
month
                       for overstaying his visa died, apparently of heart failure, 
last week.





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