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“I
am at a loss of words, to give anger management classes to a
person who threw a bomb at an innocent Muslim family!!"
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Dina
Rashed, IOL Correspondent
Chicago,
September 24 (IslamONline.net) – Leaders of the Muslim community
vocalized their frustration in objection to the light sentence was
issued by the 5th District of Cook County Circuit Court against a man
who threw a bomb at a Chicago Muslim family last March.
Eric
K. Nix assaulted the Muslim family in the South Chicago neighborhood
of Burbank, by throwing an explosive device which blew off the door of
the their van and left a big hole in its the floor. The family escaped
unscathed.
The
assailant had an earlier criminal record of committing hate crimes
against the Muslim community, when he broke the window of a furniture
store owned by an Arab a few days after 9-11 attacks. He served 30
days in prison as a result.
In
the van case, the court sentenced Nix to two years of probation and
attendance of anger management classes, a sentence that raised many
questions about the even handedness of the court system when it comes
to hate crimes committed against Muslim Americans.
“I
am at a loss of words, to give anger management classes to a person
who threw a bomb at an innocent Muslim family!!” exclaimed Safaa
Zarzour of the Council of Islamic Organization of Greater Chicago and
President of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) Chicago
chapter.
“We
at the Council of Islamic Organization and other Muslim communities
around Chicago, believe there is something terribly wrong with court
sentences when acts of terrorism are committed against Muslims,” she
told a press conference Tuesday, September 23.
Zarzour
brought up another court sentence that was issued earlier in the case
of a Florida Podiatrist who planed on blowing several Islamic centers,
and later admitted to his wrong doings and acquisition of explosives
in order to carry out acts of terror against the Muslim houses of
worship and community centers.
Despite
the fact that he was sentenced to 12 and half years of imprisonment, a
sentence that was hailed earlier by CAIR Florida chapter, Zarzour
expressed his discontent to the ruling because the terrorism laws were
not applied in this case either.
“What
kind of message is being sent to patriotic Muslim Americans who have
been here for generations?” asked Ali Khan, Executive Director of
American Muslim Council chapter in Chicago, “here we are trying to
bring equal rights and justice for Iraqis, how about those who have
been living here for generations and generations?”
“You
are alienating the Muslim community by sending out messages like
this,” khan told reporters, addressing law enforcement authorities.
Khan
stressed that had it been a Muslim who committed these crimes against
the Christian or the Jewish communities, that person would have
probably been sent to Guantanamo Bay prison without any rights, and
would have been classified as enemy combatant.
In
an earlier meeting with the FBI, that took place prior to the press
conference, leaders of the Muslim community raised the case ruling and
its disproportion to the severity of the crime committed, and the law
enforcement authorities promised to look into it, Zarzour said.
Hate
crimes against Muslims, Arabs rose
to a sky rocketing level following the events of September 11,
and law enforcement officials were not fully prepared to combat such
onslaught, a recent report by the Human Rights (HRW) Watch advocacy
group said Thursday, November 14.
Since
the 9-11 attacks, the Chicago FBI and other law enforcement
authorities have been meeting with the Muslim community leaders, and
others who could be mistaken for being either Arab or Muslim such as
the Sikh community, in order to establish continuing channels of
communication regarding security concerns.
Chicago
community leaders said they will continue to voice their resentment to
the discrimination against the innocent community members until
justice is served.