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Palestinian Professor, Al-Najjar, To Be Deported From U.S. 

Mazen al-Najjar's sister (r) and wife (l), Fedaa, cannot accompany Al Najjar, who is to be deported from the U.S.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 21 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A Palestinian man and former university professor in Florida, who had been imprisoned twice under secret evidence charges that brought no criminal charges, is to be deported from the U.S., his attorneys said Monday.

Mazen al-Najjar, 45, formerly an adjunct professor at the University of South Florida (USF), has faced a litany of charges including immigration violations and suspected ties to “terrorist” organizations, but has never been charged with any crime.

Held since November on a deportation order for overstaying his visa issued 20 years ago, al-Najjar, a stateless Palestinian, will be released this week from a federal prison, where he was held in solitary confinement, after which he will be deported to an undisclosed Middle Eastern country.

Martin Schwartz, one of the attorneys involved in Al-Najjar's case, said, "There's no justification for the fact he's been detained all this time and there's no justification for sending him to a country and splitting him up from his family."

Hussein Ibish, a spokesman for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, a Washington-based civil rights group, condemned the "frankly brutal treatment" of al-Najjar, calling it an injustice that he was detained essentially without charge, reports news agencies.

"His due process rights have been completely disregarded ... in total violation of constitutional rights," he said.

Noting that he was not questioning the government's right to deport people lacking proper immigration papers Ibish commented, "There is no basis for locking people up without charge indefinitely."

Al-Najjar, who has lived in the U.S. since 1981 and has three American-born daughters, was first arrested in 1997 and spent three years in jail due to his association with the Florida-based Islamic Committee for Palestine (ICP) and the World and Islam Studies Enterprise (WISE) think tank, both of which were accused – but never charged – of being fronts for terrorist support networks after one of their members turned up as the new head of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) in 1995.

He was never charged with any crime, and was denied bail on the basis of evidence neither he nor his lawyers ever saw. In 1999, a habeas federal court lawsuit was filed; in May 2000, it was found that al-Najjar had been denied due process during his bail hearing.

In October, another judge ruled that al-Najjar was not a threat to national security as his detractors had claimed in trying to keep him behind bars, because there were no "facially legitimate and bona fide reasons to conclude that [Respondent] is a threat to national security."

After then-Attorney General Janet Reno blocked the government’s appeal to continue his detention, al-Najjar was freed in December 2000, only to be re-arrested last November on a visa violation after the Sept. 11 attacks, in what some supporters said was part of a backlash against people of Arab or Muslim origin.

Ibish said that authorities have not suggested any link between al-Najjar and Sept. 11, his re-arrest was likely part of a backlash. "Since Sept. 11 the Justice Department now considers that Arabs and Muslims from South Asia in this country with some sort of visa problem ... may be detained indefinitely," he said.

U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard concluded in February that the government had legitimate reasons for keeping al-Najjar imprisoned for at least six months while trying to deport him.

For nearly a year, al-Najjar has been kept in 23-hour solitary lockdown, shackled hand and foot whenever he leaves his cell, strip-searched twice a day even after non-contact visits, and allowed only one 15-minute phone call per week to his family.

An Amnesty International report last year found that he was not allowed visits from his family for the first 30 days of his detention.

Al-Najjar founded the ICP charity and WISE think tank with his brother-in-law, Sami Al-Arian. Both men have consistently denied any connection to terrorists.

Even though Al-Najjar’s case sparked a bill in Congress to ban the use of secret evidence in immigration cases, he will be deported sometime this week said Rodney Germain, an Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) spokesman, but declined to say when he would leave or where he would be going.

Officials at the U.S. Justice Department and INS in Washington , DC , did not return phone calls Sunday from news agencies.

Another attorney for Al-Najjar, Joe Hohenstein, said Al-Najjar has acquired travel documents from the Palestinian Authority and will be deported to an Arab country "with friendly relations with the United States," such as Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar or Bahrain.

"One of the Arabic countries has accepted him," Schwartz told news agencies, but would not identify the country.

Al-Najjar's wife, Fedaa, also a Palestinian, is also under a deportation order and is trying to find a country that will accept her, so that at some point she and her three U.S.-born daughters, aged 13, 11 and 7, can be reunited with Mazen Al-Najjar, Hohenstein said, reports news agencies.

She cannot travel with her husband due to lack of travel documents and will remain in the United States , but hopes to be reunited with al-Najjar later, said Schwartz.

"I'm very happy that the miserable condition of my husband will soon end, but my daughters have been very sad that they will soon leave the only country they know and love," she said in a statement.

For his part, al-Najjar sees the deportation order as a mixed blessing, said Hohenstein.

"He wants to be able to stay and raise his family [in the United States ]," he said. "But at the same time, he wants to be able to live in freedom."

Al-Najjar’s brother-in-law, al-Arian, a tenured computer science professor at USF, has been suspended with pay since September after he and the university received threats following his appearance on a Fox News television show to discuss the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington.

USF President Judy Genshaft is expected to decide whether to fire him sometime before fall semester classes begin August 26, reports news agencies.

Al-Arian, a Palestinian and a legal U.S. resident and former head of WISE and ICP, contends he is being fired because of his pro-Palestinian views.

USF officials say his firing would have nothing to do with academic freedom, saying he is a safety risk on campus and did not clearly say he was not speaking for the school when he expressed his opinions publicly on Fox News.

 

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