CHICAGO,
October 21 (IslamOnline.net) - Modeled after a congressional hearing,
activists, experts spoke Monday, October 20, of racial profiling and
discrimination against minorities and people of color in the United
States, mainly African, Arab and South Asian and Latino Americans.
Timothy
K. Lewis, former judge at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit, presided over the hearing while a number of commissioners
listened to testimonies of the unequal treatment that challenges the
communities on almost daily basis.
"All
testimonies will be put in a report for international distribution and
we hope that the American Congress will also act on this issue of human
rights," said Lewis.
"We
are not against effective law enforcement, but we are against abuse of
civil rights in the name of law enforcement," he said.
Lewis
said that evidence is compiling that on the contrary these measures are
working against law enforcement as communities are becoming more
frightened and flow of information is drying up from the sources.
Anti-Muslims
Drawing
on his experience with the Muslim and Arab communities, Jim Fennerty, of
the National Lawyers Guild, said they have been under attack every time
they criticized the American foreign policy, and even more after 9/11.
"We
are heading to a society where everything is based on secrecy," he
said, referring to the measures of law enforcement officers in rounding
up whom they consider suspects without properly notifying their family
members about their charges or even their whereabouts.
Fennerty
also slammed the new measures of the law enforcement such as FBI, which
rounds up members of the community whenever they speak in criticism of
U.S. foreign policy and the war abroad.
There
is no basis for FBI’s involvement in peaceful public demonstrations
especially those organized by pro-Palestinian in response to Middle East
events, since such demonstrations are not a criminal activity, a
requirement for FBI to investigate, he stressed.
Furthermore,
this profiling has been extended from individuals to institutions and
charities working with Muslims and Arabs, Fennerty said, asserting that
such charities are suffering because people are afraid of donating lest
they would be labeled terrorist.
"It’s
an attitude now, it’s easy to scapegoat every Muslim and every
Palestinian," he concluded.
Ali
Khan, the Executive Director of the Chicago chapter of the American
Muslim Council, gave a more personal account of ethnic and religious
profiling in airports following September 11.
He
said that like the Japanese Americans were rounded up during the World
War II, and the communists in the 1960s, now Muslims are suffering
discriminatory policies.
"I
am as American as anyone in this room, I love this country, but I am the
only one that has to prove his patriotism," Khan lamented.
He
recalled his own experience in a Las Vegas airport where he was not
permitted aboard the plane and was interrogated in front of all other
passengers because of his name, religion and ethnic background.
Khan
contended that organizations such as Amnesty International and American
Civil Liberties Union can help the community with many cases of
profiling that do not make it to the light.
"A
lot of people are frightened and scared and do not even come out with
what happens to them," he noted.
Suffering
Minorities
Latino
communities, on the other hand, suffer other forms of profiling mainly
associated with the work and housing policies.
Florentina
Rendon, from the HOPE Fair Housing Center, explained the numerous raids
that police officers mount on houses of the Latino community for
suspicion of overcrowdings.
In
many cases, families are prohibited from using the rear doors of their
homes, and accepting visitors in order to control the human flow into
the houses.
Emma
Lozano, of Centro sin Fronteras, complained the unfair employment
policies that many Latino face in the U.S., and said that the community
is being taken advantage of because they offer cheap labor and get much
fewer benefits than the average American worker.
African
Americans still face numerous police brutality whether during raids on
drugs by officers in many public housing units or within the police
stations, said Lydia Taylor, of the Justice Coalition of Greater
Chicago.
She
added that the war on drugs and gangs has been the excuse of law
enforcement to terrorize the black community, and that the Chicago
city’s ban on racial profiling did not go beyond the rhetoric.
"Racial
profiling is an extension of slavery," Taylor charged.