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SF Protest to Stop the Special Re-registrations
On Wednesday, November 19, a hundred people gathered in front of the San Francisco BICE (INS) Building in support of a noontime press conference to protest the beginning of the special re-registrations of immigrants from mainly Muslim countries.
Last year special registrations meant humiliation, detentions and brutality for many of the nearly 90,000 who registered. In the end, about 13,000 faced deportation proceedings—yet not a single “suspected terrorist” was among them. Now these same people are being persecuted again.
San Francisco's protest was one of many that happened nationally, including New York City:
http://www.nyc.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=81895
Sponsored by the Blue Triangle Network, American Muslim Voice, We R One/Inter-Community Action Alliance. Co-sponsored by Not in Our Name and many others.
San Francisco's protest was one of many that happened nationally, including New York City:
http://www.nyc.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=81895
Sponsored by the Blue Triangle Network, American Muslim Voice, We R One/Inter-Community Action Alliance. Co-sponsored by Not in Our Name and many others.
For more information:
http://www.notinourname.net/detentions
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This page is great ... I just wanted to add that there is a short relevant video clip online called, "Disappeared in the U.S.A." ... features an interview with Munaf, whose family was the subject of a "special interview" and Nora Erakat, an energitic organizer and great speaker ... makes the analogy to the time after pearl harbor and the detentions in internment camps that happened back in the 40's ... some quick samples of speakouts ... and textual wrap-up ... check it out by clicking on the link ...
http://demandmedia.net/story/2003/7/14/12430/3433
And from today's Washington Post
http://www.crazyjeff.net/registration.revisited.html
US Set to Revise How It Tracks Some Visitors
Muslims Have Protested Use of Registration
By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, November 21, 2003; Page A01
The Department of Homeland Security is preparing to abandon a visitor-registration program that primarily affects Muslim men and caused widespread confusion and protests earlier this year after thousands of people who complied were arrested or ordered deported, according to several government officials. ...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1806-2003Nov20.html
http://pakistantimes.net/2003/11/22/top2.htm
the video segment is just one of many that appeared recently in a video called, We Interrupt This Empire by the Video Activists Network ...
http://www.videoactivism.org
http://demandmedia.net/story/2003/7/14/12430/3433
And from today's Washington Post
http://www.crazyjeff.net/registration.revisited.html
US Set to Revise How It Tracks Some Visitors
Muslims Have Protested Use of Registration
By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, November 21, 2003; Page A01
The Department of Homeland Security is preparing to abandon a visitor-registration program that primarily affects Muslim men and caused widespread confusion and protests earlier this year after thousands of people who complied were arrested or ordered deported, according to several government officials. ...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1806-2003Nov20.html
http://pakistantimes.net/2003/11/22/top2.htm
the video segment is just one of many that appeared recently in a video called, We Interrupt This Empire by the Video Activists Network ...
http://www.videoactivism.org
Special Registration for Arab Immigrants Will Reportedly Stop
By RACHEL L. SWARNS
Published: November 22, 2003
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 ? The Homeland Security Department has decided to stop a program that required thousands of Arab and Muslim men to register with immigration authorities after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, officials said on Friday.
Hoping to hunt down terrorists, immigration officials fingerprinted, photographed and interviewed 85,000 Muslim and Arab noncitizens from November 2002 to May 2003 under the program. The effort, the largest to register immigrants in decades, required annual reporting. Men from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria began going to immigration offices for a second round of registrations this month.
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Officials have acknowledged that most of the Arabs and Muslims who have complied with the requirements had no ties to terrorist groups. Of the 85,000 men who went to immigration offices early this year, as well as tens of thousands screened at airports and border crossings, 11 had links to terrorism, officials said.
The program was sharply criticized by civil liberties groups and advocates for immigrants. The critics said it did little to find terrorists and alienated the very communities that could help uncover terrorists. Advocates for immigrants have also complained that immigration officials have done little to publicize the second round, touching off waves of confusion and anxiety.
Government officials said questions had arisen about the effectiveness of the program. They said an announcement about ending it might be made as early as next week.
A spokesman for the Homeland Security Department, William Strassberger, would not confirm any decisions on program, but acknowledged that it was being reviewed to determine whether it should end. The decision to discontinue the program, known as special registration, was first reported in The Washington Post.
"We're continuing to evaluate the special registration program for its effectiveness and efficiency and whether this is the best use of resources," Mr. Strassberger said.
He said the program might be superseded by an effort in which immigration officials at 115 airports and 14 seaports will begin collecting digital fingerprints and photographs from foreign visitors who enter the United States with visas. That program, which is scheduled to begin in January, is not be specifically directed at Muslims and Arabs, he said.
Advocates for immigrants said they were relieved to hear that the special registration program would end, but said many immigrants remained uncertain about complying with the second round of reporting.
"It's definitely a good sign that homeland security is looking into the matter, but people are still very confused," said Kareem Shora, a legal adviser for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee.
Lucas Guttentag, a senior lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, called the decision an admission of failure.
"The government's plan to terminate special registration for Arab and Muslim immigrants," Mr. Guttentag, head of the Immigrants' Rights Project at the A.C.L.U., said, "is an implicit acknowledgement that this was a failed, discriminatory program."
The government began registrations at airports and border crossings in October 2002, focusing on visitors from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria, as well as other people who seemed suspicious or had unusual itineraries. The special registration program was announced in November.
By RACHEL L. SWARNS
Published: November 22, 2003
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 ? The Homeland Security Department has decided to stop a program that required thousands of Arab and Muslim men to register with immigration authorities after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, officials said on Friday.
Hoping to hunt down terrorists, immigration officials fingerprinted, photographed and interviewed 85,000 Muslim and Arab noncitizens from November 2002 to May 2003 under the program. The effort, the largest to register immigrants in decades, required annual reporting. Men from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria began going to immigration offices for a second round of registrations this month.
Advertisement
Officials have acknowledged that most of the Arabs and Muslims who have complied with the requirements had no ties to terrorist groups. Of the 85,000 men who went to immigration offices early this year, as well as tens of thousands screened at airports and border crossings, 11 had links to terrorism, officials said.
The program was sharply criticized by civil liberties groups and advocates for immigrants. The critics said it did little to find terrorists and alienated the very communities that could help uncover terrorists. Advocates for immigrants have also complained that immigration officials have done little to publicize the second round, touching off waves of confusion and anxiety.
Government officials said questions had arisen about the effectiveness of the program. They said an announcement about ending it might be made as early as next week.
A spokesman for the Homeland Security Department, William Strassberger, would not confirm any decisions on program, but acknowledged that it was being reviewed to determine whether it should end. The decision to discontinue the program, known as special registration, was first reported in The Washington Post.
"We're continuing to evaluate the special registration program for its effectiveness and efficiency and whether this is the best use of resources," Mr. Strassberger said.
He said the program might be superseded by an effort in which immigration officials at 115 airports and 14 seaports will begin collecting digital fingerprints and photographs from foreign visitors who enter the United States with visas. That program, which is scheduled to begin in January, is not be specifically directed at Muslims and Arabs, he said.
Advocates for immigrants said they were relieved to hear that the special registration program would end, but said many immigrants remained uncertain about complying with the second round of reporting.
"It's definitely a good sign that homeland security is looking into the matter, but people are still very confused," said Kareem Shora, a legal adviser for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee.
Lucas Guttentag, a senior lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, called the decision an admission of failure.
"The government's plan to terminate special registration for Arab and Muslim immigrants," Mr. Guttentag, head of the Immigrants' Rights Project at the A.C.L.U., said, "is an implicit acknowledgement that this was a failed, discriminatory program."
The government began registrations at airports and border crossings in October 2002, focusing on visitors from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria, as well as other people who seemed suspicious or had unusual itineraries. The special registration program was announced in November.
For more information:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/22/politics...
November 24, 2003 Update: Despite media reports, the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee would like to reiterate that the requirements of Special Call-In Registration and Port of Entry Registration are still in effect. Recent press coverage indicates that administration officials are considering cancellation of registration requirements. However, to date, all registration and re-registration requirements continue to be in effect with the same failure to comply penalties.
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