Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Islamic groups stir up anger at the FBI








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Dear Solsticewitch13 ,


Back in March we sent you two emails reporting the arrest of
Ahmadullah Niazi by the FBI. The second email included the following
paragraph:


Last week we emailed you the story of how the
brother-in-law of an Osama bin Laden bodyguard was arrested after being
recorded by an informant saying he wanted to blow up buildings, acquire
weapons and send money to the Afghan mujahedeen. We have since learned
that the suspect has used unlicensed money transfers to send money to
countries like Afghanistan.

The response by various Islamic organizations,
such as the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the Muslim
Public Affairs Council, and the Islamic Society of North America, has not
been to express regret for the actions of Niazi or contend that his
actions are atypical.

Rather, these organizations have attacked
the FBI and are stirring up anger against the agency. An April
20th article in the Los Angeles Times (below) reports on this
activity.

Recently, ACT! for America chapter leaders attended a
Florida event sponsored by CAIR. At this event they found materials for
sale by Sayyid Qutb, one of the 20th century’s most radical
Islamists. (To view a video of the CAIR event, filmed by ACT! for America
chapter leaders,
click here).

CAIR has ties to Hamas. CAIR was named
an unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation terrorism
financing trial, at which guilty verdicts were handed down on 108 counts.
A number of CAIR officials have been convicted or deported on terrorism or
other criminal charges. The FBI has severed official ties to CAIR due to
CAIR’s history with Hamas.

And now CAIR has the audacity to attack the FBI for doing its job.








Some influential
Muslim groups question FBI's actions


Revelations that
the agency has been surveilling popular leaders and infiltrating mosques
and schools has many organizations turning away from their post-9/11
cooperation.

By Paloma Esquivel
April 20, 2009
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-muslims-fbi20-2009apr20,0,7708003.story


As they sipped tea and nibbled on dates, more than 100 men and
women listened to a litany of speakers sounding the same message: The FBI
is not your friend.

"We're here today to say our mosques are off
limits," Hussam Ayloush, executive director of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations for Greater Los Angeles, told the crowd last
month at an Anaheim mosque.

"Our Koran is off limits," Ayloush
said. "Our youth, who they try to radicalize, are off limits. Now is the
time to tell them, 'We're not going to let this happen anymore.' "


Such strong words from a man who once was a vocal advocate of ties
with federal law enforcement was yet one more signal that the fragile
relationship between Muslim American groups and the FBI is being tested.


In the months and years after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11,
2001, FBI officials met privately with Muslim leaders, assuring them that
a spate of hate crimes would be vigorously investigated and at the same
time asking for help in the campaign against terrorism. Local leaders
promised to encourage cooperation.

But even as relations warmed, a
series of revelations -- including allegations that the FBI sent an
informant into a mosque in Orange County, surveilled community leaders and
sent an agent to UC Irvine -- caused some to begin questioning the FBI's
real intentions.

Now, the leaders of several Muslim organizations
say they feel betrayed. Because Orange County has been at the center of
many of the revelations, local leaders have taken a lead in challenging
the FBI, but the issues are resonating nationwide.

On Sunday, a coalition of the nation's largest Muslim organizations, including the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, the Muslim Public Affairs Council
and the Islamic Society of North America, issued a statement demanding
that the Obama administration address FBI actions, including what they
describe as the "infiltration of mosques," the use of "agent provocateurs
to trap unsuspecting Muslim youth" and the "deliberate vilification" of
the council.

"It reached a level where we felt we had to do
something," said Agha Saeed, chairman of the American Muslim Taskforce on
Civil Rights and Elections. "The FBI is doing things which are not
healthy. They are creating divisions and conflict, creating a totally
negative, Islamophobic image of Muslims in America."

Over the years, there's been a gradual erosion of trust between the groups and the
FBI. Months ago, the agency told local leaders it was suspending relations
with the council, one of the largest Muslim civil rights groups in the
country.

Since then, things have unraveled rapidly. Like other
Muslim communities in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, many in Orange
County -- home to more than 100,000 Muslim Americans, dozens of mosques
and several prominent Muslim community organizations -- worried about FBI
investigations.

The FBI, in turn, believed terrorists were either
trying to get to Southern California to carry out attacks or were already
here. To gain intelligence and demystify the agency's operations, the FBI
met with local leaders and formed a committee that met monthly.


"In the post-9/11 world, the Arab American and Muslim community
became one of those places where we said, 'It's worth making the extra
effort,' " said FBI spokesman John Miller, who is also in charge of the
agency's national community outreach program.

Early on, Ayloush said the FBI was acting in good faith and working with the community as
"partners rather than suspects."

But the delicate relationship soon began to fray.

In 2004, the FBI and immigration officials
arrested the popular head of an Anaheim mosque; he was held on
immigration-related charges for two years until a judge ordered his
release pending deportation. In 2006, an FBI agent was quoted as telling a
business group in Newport Beach that the agency was monitoring Muslims at
local universities. A year later, UC Irvine students said an FBI agent
conducting an investigation at the school assaulted a Muslim student with
his car near the site of a demonstration.

On a national level,
there was the disclosure that FBI agents had been secretly monitoring
radiation levels at mosques in search of radioactive bombs. More troubling
were news reports that Muslims had been asked to become informants or face
deportation.

The breaking point came in February with the
revelation that the FBI had sent an informant to an Irvine mosque to
collect evidence of jihadist rhetoric and other allegedly extremist acts
by a Tustin man who attended prayers there.

To some, the incidents
added up to this conclusion: The government was targeting all Muslims.
Miller strongly disputes that contention, saying that the agency does not
go on "fishing expeditions."

"What we investigate is people," he
said. "If we develop information on a person, that investigation may take
us different places -- to their home, their place of business . . . and
yes, if . . . they go to a mosque, the investigation may take us to the
mosque. That is part of what we do."

The Council on
American-Islamic Relations was named in 2007, along with hundreds of other
organizations and individuals, as an unindicted co-conspirator in a case
against the Texas-based Holy Land Foundation, which the government accused
of funneling money to terrorists.

As a result, the FBI suspended relations with the council this year.

"That is not to suggest that
anyone or everyone associated with CAIR has any kind of taint," Miller
said, adding that "there are some issues we would like to know more about
from the leaders at CAIR's headquarters."

But at the recent
meeting at the Anaheim mosque, the tone was one of frustration and anger.


Speakers suggested that ordinary Muslim Americans need to protect
themselves from overzealous FBI agents.

"You don't get brownie
points for speaking to them," said Ameena Qazi, a lawyer for the council.
"They don't go back to the office and check off your civic engagement or
your patriotism. . . . We are a very open and hospitable community, but we
shouldn't be naive."

Attendees applauded Qazi's statement, but it
was a mea culpa that most moved them.

"We goofed up, guys,"
said Shakeel Syed, head of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern
California. "We brought them here. We brought them to our mosques, to our
meetings. . . . We have to hold ourselves responsible. That's why it's so
important to dig our heels into the ground and say we're not going to take
this lying down, we're going to fight."

He got the loudest applause of the night.




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www.actforamerica.org


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