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U.S. Civil Liberties Activists Criticize Treatment Of Palestinian Professors

Mazen al-Najjar was deported Thursday from the U.S. to an undisclosed Middle Eastern country

TAMPA, Florida, Aug 23 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - U.S. civil liberties advocates on Friday criticized the treatment of two Palestinian professors in Florida investigated for alleged links to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), which the U.S. administration considers a terrorist organization.

One of the professors, 44-year-old Mazen al-Najjar, was deported to Bahrain on Thursday. He spent much of the past five years in detention in a seven-year legal battle to remain in the U.S. Secret evidence the government said linked him to terrorism, but he was never formally charged with any crime.

His ordeal has been cloaked in secrecy by U.S. authorities.

Randall Marshall of the American Civil Liberties Union said Thursday that holding Najjar on secret evidence was unconstitutional and that "the 10 months that he spent in solitary confinement was nothing more than the raw exercise of government power."

Earlier in the week, authorities said al-Najjar had been issued travel papers for an undisclosed Middle Eastern country.

His lawyers said he was released and deported Thursday, but did not immediately give further details.

Early Friday, al-Najjar's final destination was unclear, but an Embassy of Bahrain official in Washington, Jamal Rowaie, said he had been granted a two-week tourist visa, but would reject him because that was only for ordinary tourists, reported the St. Petersburg Times.

The Tampa Tribune reports al-Najjar boarded a plane at 9 a.m., flanked by U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service agents. His arrival in Bahrain could not be confirmed early Friday.

"His case is not an ordinary case," Rowaie said. "Because of that, Bahrain will not allow him to come."

The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) first arrested al-Najjar, who has not been formally charged with any crime, in May 1997. He was released in December 2000, but was arrested again in November 2001.

Al-Najjar spent the last 10 months of his stay in the U.S. in solitary confinement at a federal prison. His family knew his deportation was likely this week, but was not given notice or a chance to see him off, reports the Tribune.

In a statement released Thursday, Rep. David Bonior (D-MI), a longtime supporter of Muslim and Arab causes, and personally involved in al-Najjar’s case, said, "The injustice of secret evidence made possible the wrongful jailing of Dr. Al-Najjar and has now culminated in his unjust deportation.

"We have denied Dr. Al-Najjar his liberty and his rights based on unsubstantiated, secret allegations. This blatant disregard for our constitutional rights and the basic rights of due process has served as the Justice Department's modus operandi since the beginning of this case.

"It is reprehensible that Dr. Al-Najjar's family is being fractured yet again by the Department's action. The promise of liberty that America has held out to its immigrants for two centuries never included the separation and destruction of the family - that is until now,” Bonior commented, adding, “In a country that has shown compassion in the past by taking in refugees, this deportation - which makes refugees out of American children and their parents - is simply wrong and immoral.”

The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service first arrested Najjar in May 1997. He was released in December 2000 but was arrested again in November 2001 and held in solitary confinement until his deportation.

Al-Najjar was deported one day after the university where he once taught sued to fire his brother-in-law, Sami al-Arian, because of his own alleged ties to terrorism.

Al-Najjar and al-Arian, who both taught at the University of South Florida (USF) in Tampa, have been under investigation for years, suspected of links with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), which figures on the U.S. list of international terrorist organizations.

University authorities have sought a judge's clearance to fire Arian, who has been suspended for almost a year.

Al-Arian Thursday denied claims that he raised funds for terrorists, and made it clear he would fight a decision by USF to fire him.

"There is no evidence that they can show that I ever fund raised" for the PIJ, he said at a news conference, after university authorities announced they were seeking court clearance to fire the computer science professor.

Al-Arian, who has been suspended for almost a year, made it clear he would fight for his reinstatement and clear his name.

"This issue of academic freedom, for both men, is troubling," said Joe Hohenstein, an attorney for Najjar. "It's very distressing that [the university authorities] are moving the way they are," he said.

"In both cases, the question is: 'Can we fire someone because we don't like what they said?'" Hohenstein said.

Al-Arian has not been charged with any crime, but a federal investigation is seeking to determine whether the USF-based World and Islamic Studies Enterprise (WISE) think-tank he founded, fueled funds to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

USF President Judy Genshaft announced Wednesday that the university asked a judge to rule whether firing al-Arian would violate his constitutional right to free speech.

Al-Arian said Thursday he would try to have the suit moved from state to federal court and then file a motion to have the matter dropped.

"Do I have rights or do I not have rights? It would appear right now that I don't have any rights?," he said.

"Right now it seems like a majority of the people think 'No, you don't have rights because you don't agree with us.'

"I'm an Arab, I'm a Palestinian, I'm a Muslim… That's not a popular thing to be these days," said al-Arian, who was flanked by family and attorneys.

Commenting on al-Najjar’s deportation, Bonior added, "Because of our government's actions, Dr. Al-Najjar, his wife and their young children were not permitted to live their lives with any semblance of normalcy. Now, our government has acted in a manner that ensures their future will be wrought with uncertainty, trauma and possible danger.

"All Americans should mourn the trampling of our Constitution by today's deportation."
 

 

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