Sunday, September 9, 2007

HARRISONBURG KURDS -- UPDATE

This is dragging over a thread from the former Maxspeak, where postings about the case of four Kurdish men in Harrisonburg, Virginia who were targeted heavily for technical violations of transferring money to their relatives back in Iraq, helped stimulate local media attention and then public outcry, and then their release with only suspended sentences, an actual favorable outcome due to blogging effort.

Anyway, I attended a picnic this afternoon put on by the Kurdish community of Harrisonburg. The current situation is that the FBI appears to be exacting its subtle revenge on the four men. All four wish to become citizens, but all of their paperwork seems to be stalled at the FBI, even though their offenses were strictly administrative. One needs a green card and is on hold for his app, two have green cards and are on hold for their exam, and one had (and passed) his exam before all the garbage blew up. He was told two days ago that he should have become a citizen in April, 2004, but the FBI refuses to send back his paperwork. Apparently four years is the record for the FBI to sit on somebody's paperwork like this. Some more action may be needed on this matter, and apparently some letters are about to be written in support of these men.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's a shame that the archives at MaxSpeak vanished. I like what you've written about this topic before.

Anonymous said...

Wow, and I thought that I had a hard time securing a passport. That only took me six months.

Myrtle Blackwood said...

This latest situation appears to be quite predictable. Consistent with the behaviour of the Bush administration. Its almost total lack of accountability (carefully planned). This is exacerbated by their filling the public service with sympathetic ideologues, similar authoritarians and unquestioning followers.

I doubt that these authoritarians will do much in response to letter writing to their agencies.

I think it's time for the US (and Australia, for that matter) to address the huge problems in their respective electoral systems. They shouldn't be prone to hacking and fraud and independent candidates should have much more leverage on the ballot.

Those things that now less than aspirational in the US:
• Elections free of Supreme Court interference
• Congressional oversight
• Separation of church and state
• An impartial investigation of the events of 9/11
• Checks and balances
• The right of dissent without fear
• The Fourth Amendment
• Habeas corpus
• A responsible White House Press Corps
• Respect of the US by people around the world
• New Orleans
• Respect for international treaties
• Rejection of pre-emptive or preventive war
• The Geneva Conventions
• International Law
• Truth and integrity in government
• Diplomacy and cooperation with other nations
• Investigative reporting by mainstream media
• Environmental protections
• The FISA Court
• Nuclear disarmament and non proliferation
• An overburdened and under equipped military
• Almost four thousand American and coalition troops
• Hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis and Afghanis
• Fiscal responsibility
• America’s middle class
• Health care for all children
• A nation free of PNAC control
• Democracy

[George W. Bush and Black Holes!
http://tvnewslies.org/blog/?p=656 ]

An interesting publication on the nature of 'authoritarians' at:
http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/%7Ealtemey/

rosserjb@jmu.edu said...

Being able to access the detailed background on this case is one reason it would be good to get those archives back up, the sooner the better.

Brenda,

In this case, well placed letters may make some difference. After all, we got these guys suspended sentences against the wishes of the FBI and the prosecutors, with them having very strong local support in public opinion now, even if the very conservative local paper later backtracked to support the Bush line on needeing to crack down on all these people sending money without official licensees, blah blah blah.

We have reason to believe that the fairly influential local Congressman is in their camp. Both senators know of their case, and know that they are popular here locally. Powerful senators and Congressman can put pressure on the FBI, although they will probably still stall and hem and haw some. But it is far from hopeless.

Barkley

Anonymous said...

we have long had, in America and I suspect in the rest of the world, at least a simmering infection in respect to our willingness to tolerate low level... or retail ... abuses of human rights under color of law.

911, and the Bushists, have allowed that infaction to flare into life threatening disease. now, where we horribly abused individual humans one case at a time. we are embarking on an era of wholesale abuse, in public, with public assent... with the probable death of what we thought was American democracy, and a much higher likelhood of serious human abuses happening to someone you know and love.

if the "well placed letters" help, then god bless you. but beyond that unless someone finds a way to make it a real public issue.. it being the wholesale structure of abuse... it will be a case of throwing life preservers from a sinking ship.

Anonymous said...

Maxspeak archives may have temporarily 'vanished' but others have not. Courtesy of Barkley and Juan Cole, some I take to be solid background for readers who may not know:

Wednesday, June 21, 2006
Rosser Guest Op-Ed: Innocent Kurdish-Americans Victimized by Patriot Act

A Travesty of Justice: Oppressing the Kurds of Harrisonburg, Virginia

J. Barkley Rosser, Jr.

On June 26, three Kurdish men in Harrisonburg, Virginia (Rasheed Qambari, Ahmed Abdullah, and Amir Rashid) will be sentenced for sending money to Iraqi Kurdistan without a license to their families and those of fellow members of their community via the traditional hawala system (a fourth man, Fadhil Noroly, will be tried on July 11). This is a felony offense under amendments to the Patriot Act introduced after 9/11.

No longer does the transfer have to be linked in any way to any illegal activity or terrorism, nor does the party doing the transferring have to know that what they are doing is illegal. Even the FBI and prosecuting attorneys agree that none of these transfers through the traditional halawa system had anything to do with terrorism or anything of the sort. Indeed, one prosecutor declared to Rasheed Qambari during his trial on January 31, "we know that you are not the bad guys." What is going on here?

First of all observers should realize how completely absurd these cases are. Prior to 1996 these men, and most of the 70 Kurdish families now living in Harrisonburg in the Shenandoah Valley, were involved with aiding US and UK aid organizations. In that year Saddam Hussein attempted to have them arrested and killed (he succeeded with many who did not get out). The US government airlifted about 6500 of them out to Turkey as part of Operation Pacific Haven. After extensive security vetting in Guam, many were allowed to immigrate as refugees into the US, with this group ending up in Harrisonburg. These people were anti-Saddam and anti-terrorism, literally dancing in the streets at his overthrow.

Nevertheless, after 9/11, the FBI began visiting their homes, as well as those of other Muslims in the Harrisonburg community, asking them about links to terrorists and terror groups. During these interrogations these four men all told of their money transfer activities for the community to help out their families with medical and other problems. They were told that this was not a problem. No one told them that they needed to obtain federal licenses or that that they were doing anything illegal. Two of them never made any profits on their activities (Qambari in particular has translated for hospitals, schools, and even the courts for free). The two that made small profits obtained local business licenses and were under the impression that this was sufficient.

During the summer of 2006, about eight homes of Kurds in the area were raided in massive operations that involved as many as 12 different government agencies. Families were mistreated and belongings were seized, including things that did not belong to those raided (including $20,000 for the down payment on a house for someone not raided, an amount only recently returned). On October 19, 2005, the four men were indicted and were arrested in the early hours two days later. At their indictment a Croatian translator was provided, and Ahmed Abdullah spent a week in jail because he was afraid to answer any questions due to his inadequate English. On January 31, Qambari was convicted. This led to Abdullah and Rashid pleading guilty, while Noroly still holds out for a trial. They face possible sentences of up to five years and possible deportation. Qambari has stated that his life will be in danger if he returns. All four men had applied for US citizenship (they all are married with children born in the US), and Qambari had even passed the final exam with a perfect score, only awaiting his swearing in, when these events intervened.

There was almost no coverage of this in any media, only a brief, not-on-the front cover story in the Harrisonburg Daily News-Record (DNR) that repeated the prosecution's argument that Qambari was threatening "the integrity of the US financial system" by his activities. Since then a movement has grown in the area, triggered initially by blogposts by this writer on Maxspeak (whose archives contain much material) and then appearing in various local media. The most thorough story on this appeared in the June issue of the local monthly, Eighty-One, by Jeremy Nafziger, which can be accessed here [pdf]. A front page story appeared in the Washington Post on Sunday, June 18, entitled, "Kurdish Defendants Find Support in Town's Clasp," by Karin Brulliard. After two op-ed pieces, several letters, and a petition signed by over 600 citizens, the very conservative DNR came out in an editorial on May 8 for "leniency in sentencing" of the men. Leading this local movement has been a group called Standing With Our Neighbors (SWON), which has been spearheaded by local religious groups, especially many Mennonites from Harrisonburg. The DNR editorial cited an op-ed by me, "If I am Deported back to Iraq, I will die" (titled "An Investigation Gone Sour" in the paper), which can be accessed at http://cob.jmu.edu/rosserjb.

What has led to this travesty? These cases arose out of a Joint Terrorism Task Force based in Roanoke involving many agencies. They searched and searched and found nothing, but needed to show somebody that they were doing good. So, they nailed these people who have done nothing wrong other than try to help their neighbors, ignorant of the law. Given the visits to the mosque by the FBI and the general situation, it is clear that this reflects a broader anti-Muslim character of these investigations and the associated lack of respect for human rights. One can appreciate that this statute might need to be used against actual terrorists if there is no other evidence that can be used against them in court (much as Al Capone was eventually convicted of income tax evasion). But no one says these men are terrorists. This is an anti-terror bureaucracy gone out of control. Prosecuting these men makes as much sense as when autoworkers in Detroit beat a Chinese man to death because they were upset at Japanese car imports. This is an unfair and disturbing prosecution that indicates how seriously in jeopardy our rights in America have become endangered by egregious enforcement of the Patriot Act. I only hope that the judge is indeed lenient with these very worthy men.

(http://www.juancole.com/2006/06/rosser-guest-op-ed-innocent-kurdish.html)

J. Barkley Rosser, Jr. Professor of Economics and Kirby L. Kramer, Jr. Professor of Business Administration James Madison University Editor, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization

Barkley, will phone call(s) help? If so, particular persons/offices?

rosserjb@jmu.edu said...

Juan,

Thanks for dredging this up, which is pretty accurate and just before the judge did indeed give them all suspended sentences (with Norooly then pleading guilty and also getting a suspended sentence). The prosecutors and the FBI were especially out to get Qambari to serve time, who is the real leader of this group, and the main leader of the local Kurdish community, along with the imam. Qambari was a math and physics teacher in Iraqi Kurdistan. Now he works 80 hours a week as a poultry inspector.

For the moment let us hold it on calls. Consultations are going on, and SWON is ready to move. I think the first move will be letters to key people. If broader pressure is desired, I shall let everybody know. Needless to say, we wish to help these guys and will act on their requests.

BTW, my DNR column is still up on my website as labeled.