Targeting Muslim Charities In America: Islamophobia In The
States
Writers Articles And Opinions
26 November 2009
By
Stephen Lendman
In a December 2008 article, this writer explained that
the Texas-based Holy Land Foundation for Relief and
Development (HLF) was the largest American Muslim
charity until the Bush administration bogusly declared
it an enemy of the state and shut it down.
On December 4, 2001, the Treasury Department declared
HLF a terrorist group, froze its assets, and falsely
claimed they were being used to funnel millions of
dollars to Hamas. HLF's appeal was denied.
It provided vital relief to Palestinian refugees in
Occupied Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan as well as aid
for the needy in Bosnia, Albania, Chechnya, Turkey,
America, and elsewhere.
Its activities included:
-- financial aid to needy and impoverished families;
-- a sponsorship program for orphaned children;
-- numerous social services;
-- educational ones;
-- medical and other emergency work; and
-- community development, including helping
Palestinians rebuild homes that Israel maliciously
destroyed.
HLF described its work as follows. "We gave:
-- books, not bombs;
-- bread, not bullets;
-- smiles, not scars;
-- toys, not tanks;
-- liberty, not poverty;
-- hope, not despair;
-- love, not hate; (and)
-- life, not death.
Yet a July 27, 2004 press release accompanying a
Department of Justice (DOJ) indictment headlined:
"HOLY LAND FOUNDATION, LEADERS, ACCUSED OF PROVIDING
MATERIAL SUPPORT TO HAMAS TERRORIST ORGANIZATION."
Hamas IS NOT a terrorist organization. It's the
democratically elected Palestinian government that's
been maliciously maligned, targeted, sanctioned,
isolated, boycotted, attacked, and held under a
devastating Gaza siege since mid-2007.
Five HLF leaders were arrested, indicted, tried, and
on November 24, 2008 convicted on 108 counts,
including supporting a terrorist organization, money
laundering, and tax fraud - all bogus charges. On May
27, 2009, sentences ranged from 15 - 65 years for the
two main principles, Ghassan Elashi and Shukri Abu
Baker. Their crime - being Muslims at the wrong time
in America and providing charity to the most needy.
An ACLU Report on Targeting Muslim Charities
In June 2009, the ACLU published a report titled,
"Blocking Faith, Freezing Charity: Chilling Muslim
Charitable Giving in the 'War on Terrorism Financing'
"
It explained that:
"The government's actions have created a climate of
fear that chills American Muslims' free and full
exercise of their religion through charitable giving,
or Zakat, one of the 'five pillars' of Islam and a
religious obligation for all observant Muslims." Since
9/11, fulfilling it in America is a crime.
On September 24, 2001, George Bush announced the
following:
"I have signed an Executive Order (EO 13224) that
immediately freezes United States financial assets of
and prohibits United States' transactions with 27
different entities. They include terrorist
organizations, individual terrorist leaders, a
corporation that serves as a front for terrorism and
several nonprofit organizations."
In early December, the administration seized the
assets of the nation's three largest Muslim charities
and shut them down - the Holy Land Foundation for
Relief and Development (HLF), Global Relief Foundation
(GRF), and Benevolence International Foundation (BIF).
Earlier, HLF principles repeatedly asked government
officials for help in complying with the law, but were
rebuffed.
To date, the Treasury Department has closed six Muslim
charities by designating them terrorist organizations
or claiming they provided material support to
terrorism. A seventh charity was also closed for being
"under investigation." In addition, six others were
raided and and have been gravely harmed by the
publicity and intrusive surveillance. Two of them have
since closed. In total since 9/11, nine Muslims
charities have been shuttered on bogus charges in
Texas, Michigan, Missouri, Illinois, Oregon, Ohio,
Massachusetts, and New York.
According to the ACLU:
"Today, the Treasury Department has virtually
unchecked power to designate groups as terrorist
organizations. Terrorism financing laws are overly
broad and lack procedural safeguards that would
protect American charities against government
mistake(s) and abuse."
Yet independent counterterrorism policy and court case
studies show troublesome flaws in the evidence the
Treasury Department uses. A Government Accountability
Office (GAO) one, found no accountability for Treasury
designations and asset blocking. Treasury officials
even acknowledged that:
"some of the evidentiary foundations for the early
designations were quite weak (and) might (have)
result(ed) in a high level of false designations."
Yet the damage was done, forcing innocent victims into
federal prisons. The Bush administration hailed its
successes, and effectively "create(d) a general
climate in which law-abiding American Muslims fear
making charitable donations in accordance with their
religious beliefs."
In interviewing Muslim donors, the ACLU:
"documented a pervasive fear that they may be
arrested, prosecuted, targeted for law enforcement
interviews, subpoenaed, deported, or denied
citizenship or a green card because of (legal)
charitable donations" they feel obligated to give.
Today it's impossible, and nothing under Obama has
changed.
The ACLU conducted 120 total interviews, including 115
with prominent Muslims and others directly affected.
It found that:
"US terrorism financing policies and practices (have)
undermin(ed) American Muslims' protected
constitutional liberties and violat(ed) their
fundamental human rights to freedom of religion,
freedom of association, and freedom from
discrimination."
Terrorism Financing Laws Impose Guilt by Association
and Punish Legitimate Humanitarian Aid
These laws cover the following:
-- alleged schemes letting the government
administratively designate organizations as terrorist
and shut them down - with or without criminal
wrongdoing charges; and
-- criminally prosecuting targets on terrorist charges
or for providing material support to a terrorist
organization.
In both cases, guilt by association is imposed and
fundamental due process safeguards are lacking. As a
result, Muslim organizations and individuals "are
unfairly targeted in violation (of their rights under
the) First and Fifth Amendment rights and
international law."
America's counterterrorism laws are seriously flawed.
They:
"effectively impose guilt by association and do not
provide guidance about what is and is not prohibited.
(They) punish wholly innocent assistance to
arbitrarily blacklisted individuals and organizations,
undermine legitimate humanitarian efforts, and can be
used to prosecute innocent donors who intend to
support only lawful activity through (legitimate)
religious practice, humanitarian aid, speech, or
association."
The material support statute contains no exemption for
humanitarian giving, so providing food, medicines and
other vital relief to the wrong recipients can run
innocent Muslims afoul of the law with no intent
whatever to violate it. The statute provisions are so
broad that even the ICRC and other agencies like it
can be prosecuted.
Charities Denied Due Process Under the Terrorism
Financing Legal Framework
It lets the Treasury Department seize assets "pending
investigation" without charges or shutter
organizations on the basis of secret evidence
unavailable to defense attorneys on grounds of
national security, so there's no way to contest it or
obtain meaningful judicial review.
Following prosecutions, independent reviews have shown
that evidence used to target Muslim charities have
included "rank hearsay inadmissible in court, news
articles that do not even mention the charity in
question, or intelligence that has been inaccurately
and prejudicially translated."
Independent reviews in the UK, Canada, Sweden, and
Luxembourg cleared some targeted organizations. As a
result, government officials and courts in these
countries chastened US authorities for failing to show
proof in cases under review - to no avail.
Discriminatory Counterterrorism Law Enforcement
against Muslim Charities
Of the nine charities shuttered, three so far faced
criminal prosecution, only one of which was convicted,
HLF. These practices alienated US Muslims, undermined
America's standing in the Muslim world, and
contributed to charges that this country baselessly
targets Muslims and Islam.
Besides the nine charities closed, at least six others
were declared "under investigation" or raided. So far,
they haven't been charged or had their assets seized,
but have suffered measurably as as result. Two of them
have closed, Help the Needy in New York and Care
International in Massachusetts.
In one case, prosecutors named some of the country's
largest, mainstream Muslim organizations as unindicted
co-conspirators. Even though no crime was charged,
they got no chance to defend themselves or reputations
- in clear violation of their constitutional right to
presumption of innocence.
Intimidation of Muslim Donors
Many of them said FBI agents came to their workplaces
and homes for interrogations about their charitable
giving. They also complained that when returning from
abroad, Customs and Border Protection agents subjected
them to detailed questioning about their legal
contributions. Further, they were subpoenaed to
testify in more than one charity-related grand jury
investigation, contributing more to a climate of fear.
Community members were also asked to be informants at
their mosques to monitor donations there. Those
refusing risk being suspected of something to hide.
The Impact on Religious
Freedom
For observant Muslims, charitable donations are a
religious obligation, yet doing it in today's climate
risks guilt by association charges or worse. The ACLU
documented a pervasive fear of intimidating
surveillance, potential arrests, subpoenas to testify
in a criminal case against other Muslims, deportation,
and being denied their constitutional rights.
The Chilling Effect on Association with Muslim
Community and Religious Organizations
Mosques are central in the lives of observant Muslims.
Besides places to pray, they serve as hubs for various
religious and cultural practices, including schools,
charitable giving, and youth centers. Yet in today's
climate of fear, ongoing under Obama, Muslims are
inhibited from freely practicing their religion,
associations, charitable giving, and cultural beliefs.
America's war on Islam fomented enough fear to broadly
alienate Muslims, drive charitable giving underground,
and fostered a profound distrust of government and law
enforcement authorities. Rightfully, they believe
fighting terrorism is a war against them.
Conclusion
Since 9/11, the Bush and Obama administrations have
violated US and international laws that enshrine
freedom of religion, expression, association, and from
discrimination. America is a signatory to numerous
laws, including the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights and the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.
Violating them is anathema, yet it's done repeatedly,
especially against Muslims and Islam.
The ACLU wants it stopped and recommends policy
changes to the President, Treasury Department, Justice
Department, FBI, State Department, Congress, and
against proposals to create a "white list" of approved
charities. Some include:
-- repealing Executive Order (EO) 13224 - "Blocking
Property and Prohibiting Transactions with Persons Who
Commit, Threaten to Commit, or Support Terrorism;"
-- a new EO requiring watch list name verification by
credible evidence of terrorist ties and quarterly
reviews to keep current;
-- setting time limits on frozen funds, after which
beneficiaries must receive them;
-- prohibiting racial profiling;
-- ending public raids on charities under
investigation and intimidating Muslims;
-- ceasing intrusive investigations without
substantive cause to conduct them;
-- assuring the rule of law is scrupulously followed
at all times; and
-- avoid "white lists" of approved charities that
could be biased in favor of some at the expense of
others, based on religion, political affiliation, or
other factors.
The ACLU also says that current laws:
"prohibiting material support for terrorism are in
desperate need of re-evaluation and reform. (They)
punish wholly innocent assistance to arbitrarily
blacklisted individuals and organizations, undermine
legitimate humanitarian efforts, and can be used to
prosecute innocent donors who intend to support only
lawful activity through religious practice,
humanitarian aid, speech, or association."
Federal Prosecutors Seize Four US Mosques and a Fifth
Ave. Office Tower
On November 12, the AP headlined, "US Moves to Seize 4
Mosques and Skyscraper Tied to Iran," saying, but not
proving, they're "owned by a nonprofit Muslim
organization long suspected of being secretly
controlled by the Iranian government."
In its ongoing war against Islam and hostility toward
Iran, federal prosecutors filed a civil complaint in
federal court against the Alavi Foundation seeking
forfeiture of more than $500 million in assets that
include bank accounts, Islamic center schools and
mosques in New York City, Maryland, California and
Houston, over 100 acres in Virginia, and a 36-story
New York office tower.
On November 12, a Justice Department (DOJ) press
release headlined, "Manhattan US Attorney Files Civil
Action Seeking Forfeiture of Alavi Foundation's
Interest in Fifth Avenue Office Tower Controlled by
Iran." It continued saying:
"The Building is owned by 650 Fifth Avenue Company, a
partnership between the Alavi Foundation and Assa
Corporation." An earlier December 2008 complaint was
filed. Today's amended it seeking forfeiture of Assa's
interest in the building.
"The amended Complaint alleges that the Alavi
Foundation has been providing numerous services to the
Iranian Government and transferring funds from 650
Fifth Avenue Company to Bank Melli, a bank wholly
owned and controlled by (Iran)."
The property forfeitures mentioned above were also
listed "as the proceeds of violations of the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA)....together
with Executive Orders (12957, 12959, 13059, 12938, and
13382, Treasury) regulations, and as property involved
in and the proceeds of money laundering offenses."
Alavi was charged with managing the building for Iran
and running a charitable organization for its
government. Assa was accused of "providing numerous
services to Bank Melli in contravention of IEEPA and
the Iranian Transactions Regulations promulgated
thereunder...."
For 36 years, the Alavi Foundation has been an
independent charitable organization promoting better
understanding of Islamic culture "by financially
supporting charitable and philanthropic causes through
educational, religious, and cultural programs."
Its eight core programs include:
-- "grants to colleges and universities;
-- donations to Persian schools;
-- donations and loans to Islamic organizations;
-- free distribution of Islamic books;
-- donations for disaster relief funds;
-- support of the arts;
-- scholarly research; (and)
-- student loans."
It's no accident that the Obama administration renewed
Iranian sanctions on the same day Alavi was targeted,
just days after the Fort Hood tragedy, and two weeks
after Iran rejected a proposal to hand over up to 80%
of its low-enriched uranium in return for a promise
for 120 km of highly-enriched fissionable material
more than a year later.
Iran's Press TV reported the announcement as follows:
"The seizure of the places of worship is seen as a
blow to the very first amendment to the United States
Constitution in which freedom of worship is enshrined
and guaranteed as an inalienable right of all its
citizens. On (November 12), US President, Barack Obama,
renewed Washington's economic sanctions against Iran
for another year despite talks of trying to seek a
'new beginning' with the Islamic Republic....Iran has
been under US sanction since the 1979 Islamic
Revolution toppled the country US-backed monarch,
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi."
On November 15, AP headlined that "Iran Condemns US
Mosque Seizure" calling the act "disgraceful."
Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said it showed Obama
is the same as George Bush. He told parliament:
"Extension of sanctions and restrictions against Iran
for another year by the American president and the
blocking the accounts and assets of the Alavi
Foundation in America is a real disgrace."
In a later radio broadcast he added:
"After a year of empty speeches and slogans, the
behavior and conduct of this president in practice is
no better than the actions of his predecessor. The
recent actions of this country (America), presenting
unimportant and irrational proposals in the nuclear
issue which they have called just and fair, all
indicate that the alleged change was nothing but a
deceitful symbol aimed at deceiving naive
politicians."
John Winter, Alavi lawyer, said he'll contest the
seizure and expects to prevail because it's blatantly
illegal. He explained that the foundation has been
cooperating with the government's investigation for
nearly a year and added:
"Obviously the foundation is disappointed that the
government has decided to bring this action." Doing so
will further alienate Muslims globally and fuel more
anti-American sentiment.
On November 13, Houston Chronicle writers Moises
Mendoza, Mary Flood and Lindsay Wise headlined,
"Muslims decry move to seize Houston mosque,"
referring to the Islamic Education Center (IEC) of
Houston where the city's Shia Muslims worship and send
their children to an Islamic school.
Board chairman Faheem Kazimi said IEC leases the
building from the Alavi Foundation, but has no other
connection. "The Islamic Education Center is a
nonprofit independent organization, not affiliated
with any other (one)." John Floyd, IEC's lawyer, said
he spoke to New York prosecutors who apologized for
the timing so close to the Fort Hood tragedy. He added
that:
"The government said they are not interested in any of
the leaseholders or tenants and they see the (IEC) as
another lease holder."
Nonetheless, distraught worshippers milled around the
Center on November 12 avoiding reporters and guarding
the gated entrance. Others were concerned about a
community backlash and possibility they'll lose their
mosque and school. And according to Hussein Abdi who's
worshipped at IEC for two decades:
"It makes me furious. We're under attack" for being
Muslims.
IEC's web site says the following:
It "serves the community as a center for the Friday
congregation, Islamic celebrations, community
programs, and above all - a center for imparting
knowledge about Islam and promoting Islamic values.
(It tries) to inform and educate non-Muslims and
Muslims about Islam, and to provide information about
Islam on varying levels of inquiry...." It preaches
love, not hate, and is has no connection to terrorism.
Ibrahim Hooper, spokesperson for the Muslim civil
liberties and advocacy group, Council on American
Islamic Relation (CAIR), told Democracy Now's Amy
Goodman and Juan Gonzales that seizing four mosques
and other US properties has First Amendment and
religious freedom implications. With special concern
got the mosques he said:
"And whenever you're having the government seize
houses of worship, whether it's mosques or churches or
synagogues, I think that has a chilling effect on the
First Amendment freedom of religion, and I think it'll
send a very negative message to the Muslim
world....I'm already seeing (online) headlines in
Muslim media around the world, in the Arab world
(saying): "US Government Seizes Mosques in America."
He expressed concern about US headlines like a
Sacramento, CA one saying: "Local Mosque Tied to
Terror." It has about 50 families that "have nothing
to do with terrorism....they just go to the mosque
(to) pray."
We've also "seen charity after charity shut down, the
assets seized. You know, there's really not a lot left
in terms of institutions for charitable giving in the
United States, given the eight years of the Bush
administration. And, you know, quite frankly, we
haven't seen a great improvement under the Obama
administration."
After Fort Hood, Muslims have felt a backlash
nationwide. "We had the police at our headquarters
last night taking a report about death threats we've
received." They've been many other reports about
intimidation, Muslims called terrorists, and a "lot of
hate emails, a lot of threats around the country," and
anti-Muslim rhetoric on right-wing talk radio, what's
been ongoing since 9/11.
9/11 Suspects to Get New York Civil Court Trial with
No Prospect for Due Process or Judicial Fairness
On November 13, Reuters reported that:
"The accused mastermind of the September 11 attacks
and four co-conspirators will be sent to New York for
trial in a court near the site of the World Trade
Centre. (Civil liberties) advocates hailed the
decision....but Republicans lashed out, arguing that
bringing them to US soil could make New York a magnet
for new attacks and that the men deserved military
trials." Senator John McCain condemned the decision
saying they're "war criminals, who committed acts of
war against our citizens and those of dozens of other
nations."
Some New Yorkers were also "angry at the prospect of
the men coming to a city traumatized by the
hijacked-plane attacks eight years ago, but others
voiced relief that justice may soon be done." They'll
arrive in January, be held at a federal detention
facility, and be tried on confessions obtained under
torture that the Supreme Court ruled constitutionally
inadmissible in Brown v. Mississippi (February 1936),
saying:
"The rack and torture chamber may not be substituted
for the witness stand."
It cited an earlier Fisher v. State (November 1926)
High Court decision, stating:
"Coercing the supposed state's criminals into
confessions and using such confessions so coerced from
them against them in trials has been the curse of all
countries. It was the chief iniquity, the crowning
infamy of the Star Chamber (the nororious 15th - 17th
century English court), and the Inquisition, and other
similar institutions. The Constitution recognized the
evils that lay behind these practices and prohibited
them in this country....wherever the court is clearly
satisfied that such violations exist, it will refuse
to sanction such violation and will apply the
corrective."
The alleged guilt of these men is very suspect given
that they confessed under torture. More evidence also
raises doubts. According to Mark Denebeaux and other
Seton Hall University Law professors, unclassified
government data obtained through Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) requests revealed evidentiary
summaries from 2004 military hearings on whether 517
Guantanamo detainees were enemy combatants. They
showed that:
-- at most, few Afghan Guantanamo prisoners committed
violent acts;
-- 95% were seized by bounty hunters paid $5,000 per
claimed Taliban and $25,000 for alleged Al Queda
members; and
-- 20 were children, some as young as 13, but all were
brutally tortured as later revealed.
Serious questions thus remain regarding the claimed
guilt of these suspects, including the alleged
mastermind, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. He had:
-- no lawyer;
-- was isolated at black sites for over two years,
including the secret "Dark Prison" near Kabul
International Airport, infamous for its absolute lack
of light combined with brutalizing torture;
-- another north of Kabul called the "Salt Pit," where
in 2002, a detainee was stripped naked and left
chained to the floor in freezing temperatures until he
died;
-- while in Afghanistan, Mohammed was hog-tied,
stripped naked, hooded, and abused repeatedly in
numerous ways, including being:
-- kept in a prolonged state of sensory deprivation
for months;
-- waterboarded numerous times;
-- chained naked to a metal ring in his cell in a
painful crouch in intense heat and extreme cold;
-- bombarded with deafening sounds round the clock for
weeks;
-- thrown against walls forcefully, a procedure called
walling;
-- suspended from the ceiling by his arms so his toes
barely touched the ground;
-- beaten with electric cables;
-- given electric shocks; and
-- forced to endure a variety of stress positions for
extended periods, causing excruciating pain until;
-- in 2006, he was sent to Guantanamo where his
torture continued, included being waterboarded over
180 times. The other four suspects received similar
treatment.
An ICRC report said high-level Al Queda prisoners were
repeatedly tortured, especially Mohammed for his
alleged mastermind role. To exact a confession he was
told: "We're not going to kill you. But we're going to
take you to the brink of your death and back."
Whether he and the others plotted 9/11 must seriously
be questioned given that international law is clear
and unequivocal. Torture is prohibited at all times,
under all circumstances, with no allowed exceptions.
Evidence so obtained is unreliable and inadmissible as
explained above. Yet, it will be used making a proper
defense impossible, especially from court-appointed
lawyers, picked to give prosecutors an open field to
convict.
What chance then have these men (or Major Malik Nadal
Hasan, the alleged Fort Hood shooter) for due process
and judicial fairness when prosecutors have
pre-determined their guilt. The media-driven court of
public opinion already convicted them, and responsible
attorneys are now intimidated by the incarceration of
human rights lawyer Lynne Stewart for defending an
unpopular client, at the request of former US Attorney
General Ramzy Clark.
Yet due process is enshrined in US constitutional law.
The Fifth Amendment (applied to the federal
government) says:
"No person shall....be deprived of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law....;" and
The Fourteenth Amendment (applied to the states)
reads:
No "State (may) deprive any person of life, liberty,
or property, without due process of law; nor deny to
any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws."
In 1770, a future US president, John Adams, applied
the principle by defending eight British soldiers
charged with killing five Americans on March 5, 1770,
the so-called Boston Massacre, even though he knew it
might jeopardize his law practice. Initially it
suffered, but over time his reputation grew enough to
make him George Washington's Vice President, then the
second President of the United States.
Adams later called his effort "one of the most
gallant, generous, manly, and disinterested actions of
my whole life, and one of the best pieces of service I
ever rendered my country." The jury acquitted six of
the eight soldiers, convicting the other two for
manslaughter. Juries today are intimidated to convict
anyone charged with terrorism or conspiracy to commit
it. It means no one so charged has a chance, even with
expert counsel these suspects won't have.
They'll get subservient court-appointed ones, but
either way, who'll put their careers on the line for
them, try explaining why they're defending "jidahists,"
be willing to deal with the torrent of media abuse,
besides risk possible future targeting and
incarceration like Lynne Stewart.
Who'll take on the government full-force, demand due
process and judicial fairness, that witch-hunt
prosecutions stop, and that no one be pre-determined
guilty like these men. Who understands that, in a
climate of fear and intimidation, we're all as
vulnerable as they are for being Muslims at the wrong
time in America.
Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre
for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and
can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site sjlendman.blogspot.com and
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