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Hundreds detained after visits to
INS
Los Angeles - Hundreds
of men and boys from Middle Eastern countries were arrested by federal
immigration officials in Southern California this week when they
complied with orders to appear at INS offices for a special
registration program.
The arrests drew thousands of people
to demonstrate Wednesday in Los Angeles.
Immigration and Naturalization
Service spokesmen refused Wednesday to say how many people the agency
had detained, what the specific charges were or how many were still
being held. But officials speaking anonymously said they would not
dispute estimates by lawyers for detainees that the number across
Southern California was 500 to 700. In Los Angeles, up to one-fourth
of those who showed up to register were jailed, lawyers said.
The number of people arrested in this
region appears to have been considerably larger than elsewhere in the
country, perhaps because of the size of the Southland's Iranian
population. Monday's registration deadline applied to males 16 and
older from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria. Men from 13 other
nations, mostly in the Mideast and North Africa, are required to
register next month.
Many of those arrested, according to
their lawyers, had already applied for green cards and, in some
instances, had interviews scheduled in the near future. Although they
had overstayed their visas, attorneys argue, their clients had already
taken steps to remedy the situation and were following the regulations
closely.
"These are the people who've
voluntarily gone" to the INS, said Mike S. Manesh of the Iranian
American Lawyers Assn. "If they had anything to do with
terrorism, they wouldn't have gone."
Immigration officials acknowledged
Wednesday that many of those taken into custody this week have
status-adjustment applications pending that have not yet been acted
on.
"The vast majority of people who
are coming forward to register are currently in legal immigration
status," said local INS spokeswoman Virginia Kice. "The
people we have taken into custody ... are people whose non-immigrant
visas have expired."
The large number of Iranians among
the detainees has angered many in the area's Iranian communities, who
organized a demonstration Wednesday at the federal building in
Westwood.
At the rally, which police officials
estimated drew about 3,000 protesters at its peak, signs bore such
sentiments as "What Next? Concentration Camps?" and
"Detain Terrorists Not Innocent Immigrants."
The arrests have generated widespread
publicity, mostly unfavorable, in the Middle East, said Khaled Dawoud,
a correspondent for Al Ahram, one of Egypt's largest dailies. He
questioned State Department official Charlotte Beers about the
detentions Wednesday after a presentation she made at the National
Press Club in Washington. Egyptians are not included in the
registration requirement.
Beers, undersecretary of State for
public diplomacy and public affairs, was presenting examples of a U.S.
outreach campaign for the Middle East, which includes images of
Muslims leading happy lives here. Dawoud asked how that image squared
with the "humiliating" arrests in recent days.
"I don't think there is any
question that the change in visa policy is going to be seen by some as
difficult and, indeed -- what was the word you used? --
humiliating," Beers said. But, she added, President Bush has said
repeatedly that he considers "his No. 1 ... job to be the
protection of the American people."
Relatives and lawyers of those
arrested locally challenge that rationale for the latest round of
detentions.
One attorney, who said he saw a
16-year-old pulled from the arms of his crying mother, called it
madness to believe that the registration requirements would catch
terrorists.
"His mother is 6 1/2 months
pregnant. They told the mother he is never going to come home -- she
is losing her mind," said attorney Soheila Jonoubi, who spent
Wednesday amid the chaos of the downtown INS office attempting to
determine the status of her clients.
Jonoubi said that the mother has
permanent residence status and that her husband, the boy's stepfather,
is a U.S. citizen. The teenager came to the country in July on a
student visa and was on track to gain permanent residence, the lawyer
said.
Many objected to the treatment of
those who showed up for the registration. INS ads on local Persian
radio stations and in other ethnic media led many to expect a routine
procedure. Instead, the registration quickly became the subject of
fear as word spread that large numbers of men were being arrested.
Lawyers reported crowded cells with
some clients forced to rest standing up, some shackled and moved to
other locations in the night, frigid conditions in jail cells -- all
for men with no known criminal histories.
Shawn Sedaghat, a Sherman Oaks
attorney, said he and his partner, Michelle Taheripour, represent more
than 40 people who voluntarily went to register and were detained.
Some, he said, were hosed down with
cold water before finding places to sleep on the concrete floors of
cells.
Lucas Guttentag, who heads the West
Coast office of the American Civil Liberties Union's immigrant rights
project, fears the wave of arrests is "a prelude to much more
widespread arrests and deportations."
"The secrecy gives rise to
obvious concerns about what the INS is doing and whether people's
rights are being respected and whether the problems that arose in the
aftermath of 9/11 are being repeated now," he said.
Many at Wednesday's protest said they
took the day off work to join the rally, because they were shocked by
the treatment.
"I came to this country over 40
years ago and got drafted in the Army, and I thought if I die it's for
a good cause, defending freedom, democracy and the Constitution,"
said George Hassan, 65, from the San Fernando Valley.
"Oppressed people come here
because of that democracy, that freedom, that Constitution. Now our
president has apparently allowed the INS vigilantes to step outside
the Constitution."
Ramona Ripston, executive director of
the ACLU of Southern California, called the detentions doubly
disturbing because "a lot of the Iranians are Jews who fled Iran
because of persecution, and now they are undergoing similar
persecution here.... This is just terrible."
Attorney Ban Al-Wardi, who saw 14 of
her 20 clients arrested when she went with them to the registration,
said that although everyone understands the need to protect the nation
against terrorist attacks, the government's recent action went too
far.
"All of our fundamental civil
rights have been violated by these actions," she said. "I
don't know how far this is going to go before people start speaking
up. This is a very dangerous precedent we are setting. What's to stop
Americans from being treated like this when they travel
overseas?" -- Los Angeles Times
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