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Qazwini
said the innocent until proven guilty principle "is not
working with regard to the Muslim community anymore."
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DEARBORN,
Mich., May 9, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Many Muslim
and Arab Americans fear that outreach programs launched by the
administration after the 9/11 attacks means little more than propaganda,
recruitment and spying.
"It's
not about reaching out to us and including us," community activist
Kenwah Dabaja told Reuters on Tuesday, May 9.
"The
community is nervous."
Dabaja,
whose family emigrated to the United States from Lebanon, described the
government's outreach program as a misnomer.
"It's
not really outreach. To some it's recruiting and propaganda
spreading," she said, adding there was a need for genuine closer
ties.
Counterterrorism
officials are trying to build closer ties with Muslim and Arab Americans
through town hall meetings, discussions with community leaders and
one-on-one talks with local residents at mosques, schools or cultural
events.
Officials
hope closer ties will encourage community members to tip off authorities
about suspicious newcomers or militant activities, allowing agents to
foil possible plots before it's too late.
The
Detroit area, and especially the suburb of Dearborn, is home to the
largest Arab and Muslim community in the US.
While
there is no scientific count of Muslims in the US, six to seven million
is the most commonly cited figure.
Wary
Many
Arab and Muslim Americans complain of being the target of racism and
discrimination after the 9/11 attacks.
They
accuse law enforcement officials of singling them out for scrutiny in
the fight against terrorism.
"One
thing everybody is taught in this country is that you are innocent until
proven guilty, but it seems this is not working with regard to the
Muslim community anymore," said Imam Hassan al-Qazwini, head of the
Islamic Center of America, one of the largest mosques in Dearborn.
He
has recently urged the administration to review its security policies
which are unfairly targeting Muslim Americans.
A
May 2004 report released by the US Senate Office Of Research concluded
that the Arab Americans and the Muslim community have taken the brunt of
the Patriot Act and other federal powers applied in the aftermath of the
9/11 attacks.
Michael
Bouchard, a Detroit area sheriff, said improving security cooperation
with the community takes time.
"Every
time you have a long-standing misunderstanding and distrust, it takes
time to break that down," said the man, the only Arab American
running for the Senate this fall.
Some
community members fear they were under surveillance, especially after
the disclosure of domestic wiretapping as part of counterterrorism
efforts.
Thousands
of Muslim and Arabic men were rounded up and questioned in the weeks and
months following the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
The
administration agreed in February to pay $300,000 to settle an illegal
detention lawsuit brought by an Egyptian man who was rounded up after
the attacks.
Not
Enough
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"Every
time you have a long-standing misunderstanding and distrust, it
takes time to break that down," said Bouchard.
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Federal,
state and local counterterrorism officials recognize that bridging a gap
of understanding with the Arab and Muslim community is stumbling over
deep-seated mistrust and suspicions.
One
senior US counterterrorism official in Washington admits that "we
haven't done enough" to cooperate with Arab and Muslim immigrants
against terrorism.
He
said the government had to beef up intelligence gathering at home by
building trust between officials and Americans of Middle Eastern
descent, linking local police more closely into communities and
encouraging residents to volunteer information.
William
Kowalski, the FBI's acting special agent in charge in Detroit, seems to
agree.
"Our
job is to convince them that they can trust us so that they can come
forward with information that will further our investigations, or points
us in the right direction if they see suspicious individuals."
He
said the number of Arab Americans was so large in his area that almost
every US security investigation at home and abroad touched his community
in some way.