Roberto Abraham Scaruffi: U.S. State/Government-Organized Stalking - S/G-OS ...Because he refused to be involved in U.S: terrorism...

Sunday 8 February 2015

U.S. State/Government-Organized Stalking - S/G-OS ...Because he refused to be involved in U.S: terrorism...

Murtaza Hussain and Glenn Greenwald
The Intercept
2015-02-05 15:51:00

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In 2003, Sami Al-Arian was a professor at the University of South Florida, a legal resident of the U.S. since 1975, and one of the most prominent Palestinian civil rights activists in the U.S. That year, the course of his life was altered irrevocably when he was indicted on highly controversial terrorism charges by then Attorney General John Ashcroft. These charges commenced a decade-long campaign of government persecution in which Al-Arian was systematically denied his freedom and saw his personal and professional life effectively destroyed.

Despite the personal harm he suffered and the intense surveillance to which he had been subjected since as early as 1993, the government ultimately failed to produce any evidence of Al-Arian's involvement in terrorist activities, instead relying at trial overwhelmingly on the pro-Palestinian writing and speaking he had done over the years.

His ordeal finally ended last night, 12 years after it began, as Al-Arian was deported yesterday at midnight (EST) from the United States to Turkey. His deportation was part of a 2006 plea bargain to which he acquiesced in order, he told The Intercept last night while at the airport preparing to leave the U.S., to "conclude his case and bring an end to his family's suffering." Al-Arian added: "I came to the United States for freedom, but four decades later, I am leaving to gain my freedom."

A 2003 Justice Department investigation led by Ashcroft allegedly implicated Al-Arian and 8 other men in supporting Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), a group which had been designated a terrorist organization under the Clinton administration for carrying out bombings and other attacks in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian Territories. Ironically, Al-Arian had been a prominent supporter of Clinton, and even met Clinton in the White House. He once remarked to The Intercepthat the multiple occasions when he stood in very close proximity to the U.S. President should, by itself, demonstrate how ludicrous were the "terrorist" allegations. In 2000, he supported the Bush campaign (after Bush denounced racial profiling).
Comment: This case serves as a reminder to anyone who might consider speaking out against the government and against what is happening to Palestinians. The U.S. government can and will do whatever it takes to silence those who speak up. The U.S. has not been a democracy for quite a long time, and the experience of Al-Arian should only confirm that. This man's life was ruined, and in the end he did nothing wrong except speak up for those who can't, to defend the innocent.