FBI concedes Iraqi interviews Causing Anxiety
Associated Press Reporter David Ammons reports from Olympia, Washington that the FBI now concedes that its "voluntary" interviews of Iraqis and Iraqi-Americans in the U.S. are causing anxiety among the interviewees. (article available on fee-based Lexis.com.) The FBI wants us to think all is hunky-dory with the interviews. It's not. In Columbus, Ohio, there have been 16 harassment complaints filed. The Seattle- Post-Intelligencer reports ,
Some Iraqi immigrants in Washington, already anxious because of the war in their native land, say unannounced home visits by federal agents are further elevating stress levels and causing distrust of the government.Annette Lamoreaux, East Texas regional director of the American Civil Liberties Union, sat in one of the interviews last week when an Iraqi woman was being questioned, and she saw it differently.One Iraqi woman was home alone when agents came to interview her. She "thought they were going to arrest her husband," said Yahya Al-Garib, community advocate for the Iraqi Community Center in West Seattle. "They feel like they're in Iraq right now."
An immigration-rights group is working to provide legal assistance to the jittery immigrants, who are being interviewed this week in a nationwide effort to counter terrorism, curb hate crimes and track down illegal immigrants.
"With each question, I felt more and more embarrassed to be an American. I mean, this is not my America," says Ms. Lamoreaux, who advised the frightened woman being interviewed not to answer most of the questions. "These interviews may be legal, but I find them morally offensive."What are the Iraqis being asked?
The questions go like this: Do you support Saddam Hussein? Do you know any Saddam sympathizers? What is your religious affiliation? What are the names and addresses of your Iraqi family members living in the United States?Sounds to us just like the communist witch hunt in the 1950's, shades of Joe McCarthy. There are real concerns with the interviews.
"It's viewing the foreign born and newcomers with suspicion, a guilty-until-proven-innocent approach. We need to find that balance between being open to immigration and remaining safe." Contributing to the problem are contradictory signals from the government, says Doris Meissner, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute and a former INS commissioner. For instance, having FBI agents simultaneously conducting interviews and enforcing immigration laws could exacerbate immigrants' fears.As for the FBI's assertions that they are not seeking to arrest and deport Iraqis, but only to question them, consider this, from the Associated Press:
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