Thursday, March 12, 2009

Muslim leaders cry 'foul' yet again






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Dear Solsticewitch13 ,

Once again, a Muslim is arrested by the FBI on
terrorism-related charges. And once again, the response from Muslim
leaders is to play the victim card and lash out at the FBI. This in spite
of the fact that for years the FBI leadership has bent over backwards to
reach out to the Muslim community, even to the point of utilizing
organizations like CAIR (the Council on American-Islamic Relations) to
conduct sensitivity training sessions for its agents.

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Muslim community
rallies behind Sudbury man charged by the FBI

http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2009/03/08/muslim_community_rallies_behind_sudbury_man
_charged_by_the_fbi?mode=PF


By Milton J. Valencia, Globe Staff March 8, 2009


To friends and family, he was a maturing leader in the Muslim
community, a passionate writer who was departing for Saudi Arabia for a
career as a pharmacist. But the arrest of Tariq Mehanna in
November, as he was about to board a plane at Logan International Airport
for his new life in the Middle East, has cast the 26-year-old in darker
terms, as a liar supporting and associating with terrorists.

With
an indictment in federal court, the Sudbury man faces a maximum sentence
of eight years in prison on charges of lying to investigators in a
terrorism inquiry. But a community of supporters has rallied around him,
questioning how Mehanna could have been ensnared in a federal case and
whether he is being used a pawn in the FBI's war on terrorism.


"They're kind of painting the wrong picture of the Muslim
community," said S. Ahmad Zamanian of Houston, a friend of Mehanna's.
"Anyone who has met Tariq . . . would all tell you that this man is far
removed from anyone's definition of a terrorist."

Mehanna has been
released pending trial after his parents posted more than $1 million in
surety, including their sprawling Sudbury home. His lawyers, led by J.W.
Carney Jr. of Boston, are challenging the case.

But he is also
fighting a separate battle to shed a stigma that has shadowed him since
his arrest, as he faces scrutiny over his blog postings, his
acquaintances, and his associations with people such as Daniel Maldonado,
who later became the first American charged with terrorism activities in
Somalia.

Just as often as Mehanna's friends have defended him,
others have referred to him as an "Al Qaeda blogger." His interpretations
of Arabic passages - seen as poetic by some - have been taken by critics
as a promotion of Islamic fundamentalism.

"You can bet that the
FBI arrest on relatively minor charges was taken because there was a
reasonable fear that Mehanna was leaving the country to join or further
support the jihad himself," said a blogger known as Rusty Shackleford, on
the popular Jawa Report website he runs that monitors terrorism
investigations.

Citing the ongoing case, the FBI and federal
prosecutors would not comment for this article, only referring to the
federal indictment.

It is clear that Mehanna did not help his case
by openly supporting controversial figures such as Aafia Siddiqui, the
Pakistani woman who was on the FBI's Most Wanted List before she was
arrested last year on charges of shooting at a US soldier in Afghanistan.
A 1995 MIT graduate, Siddiqui reportedly established ties with Al Qaeda
during her time in Boston.

In another example of questionable
associations, some of the inspiration for Mehanna's writings were
prominent fundamentalist figures such as Abdullah Azzam and Sayyid Qutb,
who are considered significant influences by Al Qaeda and the Muslim
Brotherhood, a fundamentalist movement.

Mehanna does not dispute
his support of Siddiqui, or the sources of his writings. But through his
lawyer, Carney, he characterized such support as nothing more than
following his own beliefs.

He says he has never met Siddiqui but
is concerned with the controversy surrounding her arrest, noting her
supporters around the world have questioned how a frail woman could have
managed to wrestle a weapon away from armed military men and shoot at a
soldier, while getting shot twice, as is reported. Humanitarian groups
have also questioned her mysterious disappearance and sudden arrest in
Afghanistan, he noted.

Also, through his lawyer, Mehanna
questioned the characterization of the figures he cites in his blogs,
saying they are considered "freedom fighters" by others, including those
who supported Afghanistan's opposition to Soviet Union oppression two
decades ago - a movement that was supported at the time by the US
government.

"You can take your inspiration from these leaders, and
then others will characterize you, whether they agree with your actions or
disagree," Carney said.

Mehanna was not one to hide his devotion
to Islam, and he seemed to be more dedicated to his religion as he matured
from a guitar-playing high school student into a local leader who taught
at religious schools and gave sermons during Friday services. He created a
blog called Iskandrani, a name tied to his Egyptian ancestry, and was
considered a leader to teenagers at the Worcester Islamic Center. He went
under the name Abu Sabaya, which he translated as "Father of Children."


As he encountered others as devout as himself, Mehanna met
Maldonado, a Massachusetts native who converted to Islam in 2000.
Maldonado, also known as Daniel Aljughaifi, immersed himself in his new
religion, wearing traditional Arab clothing and reportedly chastising
anyone he considered to be a sinner, even criticizing Arabs who did not
fulfill tradition by growing a full beard.

The two met at a Lowell
mosque some time around 2003. Maldonado eventually moved to Houston, where
he worked for a website that had been criticized for its sympathetic views
of terrorists. He uprooted with his family to Egypt, and then to Somalia,
where he joined rebels who were trying to form a pure Islamic government.


Mehanna, who in that time earned a doctorate degree from the
Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, spoke by phone with
his old friend in December 2006 and he was invited to join in the
fighting, authorities contend. Mehanna told Maldonado - who used code
phrases such as "peanut butter and jelly," to say, "I'm here fighting" -
that he should not say such things over the telephone, according to court
records.

Federal prosecutors allege Mehanna obstructed a terrorism
investigation when he told FBI agents just days after the phone call that
he had not spoken with Maldonado for weeks and that he thought Maldonado
was still in Egypt.

Because the FBI was conducting a terrorism
investigation, the penalty of lying to the agency is more severe than
similar charges of making false statements.

FBI agents with a
Joint Terrorism Task Force had reached out to Mehanna as early as October
2005, asking him about a trip a year earlier to Yemen, according to court
records. Carney has said in court that the trip was for educational
purposes.

But he has suggested that the interview was a disguise
of other political intentions and said that the agents were really trying
to turn his client into an informant. When Mehanna would not assist
investigators, Carney said, agents set up his client, asking him about
Maldonado's whereabouts when they already had him under surveillance in
Somalia, Carney said.

After the interview about Maldonado, agents
told Mehanna and his family - as recently as April 2008 - that they would
file charges unless he cooperated, Carney has said in court.


Carney said his client finished his school work, found a new
career with attractive benefits, and was about to board a flight when
agents arrested him - two years after the alleged crime. "At some point,
he has to get on with his life," Carney said.

According to
terrorism specialists, the tactic of turning low-level suspects into
confidential informants is nothing new. It has been more common with the
FBI, as agents have had a lack of success infiltrating Muslim communities
on their own because of scant understanding of the culture and a shortage
of agents who speak Arabic, said Mathieu Deflem, a professor at the
University of South Carolina and author on terrorism subjects.

He
added that the FBI will do anything it can in the war on terrorism to
prove it is succeeding.

But the strategy does not mean that the
arrest of Mehanna was not justified, according to Jean Rosenbluth, a law
professor at the University of Southern California, who said it was not a
coincidence that Mehanna was arrested as he was about to leave for Saudi
Arabia, which does not have an extradition treaty with the United States.


The case has offended some Muslims who have seen popular leaders
targeted for minor offenses in the war on terrorism.

In the case
of Mehanna, local leaders crowded his initial court hearings as a show of
support, saying they feel as if their community has been targeted since
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Abdul Cader Asmal, a local leader and
past president of the Islamic Center of Boston and the Islamic Council of
New England, said the arrest of Mehanna was another setback for the Muslim
community.

Asmal said he cannot make a judgment on the arrest
until the case is heard in court, but he added that the boy he shared
Superman comic books with in Sunday school years ago deserved better
treatment than to be arrested at an airport as he was about to start a new
job.

"Every time a Muslim is found to do something .. . . he's
treated as a common criminal," Asmal said. "And no one will stand up for
the Muslim community."



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