Last update - 07:37 01/03/2006

U.S. Muslim charities: U.S. government targeting us

By Reuters

WASHINGTON - U.S. Muslim charities feel they are being targeted by the U.S 
government's counterterrorism efforts. On Tuesday, a coalition of U.S. 
Muslim organizations requested a meeting with Treasury Secretary John Snow 
to discuss concerns that Muslim charities are targeted in the government's 
counterterrorism efforts.

In a letter to Snow, the American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and 
Elections (AMT) said government closures of Islamic charities have hindered 
American Muslims' ability to carry out their religious bligation to help the 
needy.

The coalition of 10 organizations referred to action this month against 
Kindhearts, a Toledo, Ohio-based Islamic nonprofit group, whose assets were 
blocked pending an investigation.


The Treasury Department said Kindhearts had links to the Palestinian group 
Hamas, which Washington considers a terrorist organization.

Since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001, the government has designated three 
major U.S. Muslim charities as suspected sponsors of terrorism and frozen 
their assets.

Muslim charitable giving has been in the spotlight since authorities 
discovered Al-Qaeda and other militants had abused charities to fund 
attacks.

In the letter to Snow, AMT said most of KindHearts' frozen assets were 
earmarked for earthquake relief in Pakistan and for a new division in South 
Asia.

"Although we understand the political climate of our country and support our 
government's efforts to thwart terrorist financing; we find it unfair that 
our government has yet made another extrajudicial decision to effectively 
wipe-out more than five years of humanitarian assistance to the world's 
needy by the mere stroke of a pen," the letter said.

Molly Millerwise, a Treasury spokeswoman declined to comment on future 
engagements for Snow, but denied that Treasury was targeting Muslim 
charities.

"The charge that they've made is completely untrue. We've worked very 
closely with the charitable sector and specifically with the Muslim American 
charitable sector to safeguard charitable giving against terrorist 
financing," she said.

"The Treasury has issued voluntary guidelines to strengthen
transparency to help ensure money intended for charitable activities does 
not fall into the hands of terrorists," Millerwise added.

Many Muslim charities and organizations in the United States say they feel 
like targets of a government "witch hunt" since Sept. 11.

Required by their faith to pay "zakat," or alms for the needy, Muslims say 
the U.S. government crackdown is intimidating donors.

http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/spages/688892.html




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