Kuwait Times

US top court takes up suit over detention of Muslims

Deported and tortured, men hope for justice

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Ahmer Abbasi speaks softly as he describes the strip searches, the extra shoves, the curses that he endured in a federal jail in Brooklyn following the Sept 11 attacks. “I don’t think I deserved it,” Abbasi said during a telephone interview with The Associated Press from his home in Karachi, Pakistan.

Abbasi’s quiet, matter-of-fact tone belies his determinat­ion, even after 15 years, to seek justice in American courts - provided the Supreme Court will let him. The justices on Wednesday are hearing an appeal from former Attorney General John Ashcroft, former FBI Director Robert Mueller and other former US officials that seeks to shut down the lawsuit that human rights lawyers have filed on behalf of Abbasi and others over their harsh treatment and prolonged detention.

“Somebody has to be accountabl­e, somebody has to be responsibl­e,” said Abbasi, 42, who works in real estate in Pakistan. The former officials, including the top immigratio­n enforcemen­t officer and the warden and deputy warden at the New York City jail, say it should not be them. “Senior government officials should not be regularly second-guessed by lawsuits seeking money damages from them in their personal capacity,” said Richard Samp, chief counsel at the Washington Legal Foundation and author of a brief from four former attorneys general.

Immigratio­n violations

Abbasi was among more than 80 men who were picked up in the days and weeks following Sept 11 on immigratio­n violations. Until then, he said he had been “living the American dream” since coming from Pakistan in 1993. He was living in Jersey City, New Jersey, across the river from Manhattan and driving a taxi in New York.

He acknowledg­es he remained in the United States after he should have left and that he entered into a fraudulent marriage so he could get a coveted “green card” that would allow him to stay in the US legally. He might never been caught except for the terrorist attacks and the aggressive response of officials who wanted to be sure there would be no follow-on strikes.

When he was arrested in late September 2001, Abbasi said he readily admitted he was in the country illegally and assumed he would be quickly deported. Instead, he was held for nearly 11 months, including more than four months in the most restrictiv­e conditions. He was stripsearc­hed frequently and allowed out of his cell for no more than a couple of hours a day. He was deported in August 2002.

The Justice Department’s inspector general produced two reports detailing problems with the detentions. The government settled an earlier suit involving five other men for $1.2 million. Rachel Meeropol of the Center for Constituti­onal Rights will argue the Supreme Court case. Meeropol said the men she is representi­ng were arrested without any evidence linking them to terrorism because they fit a profile in law enforcemen­t’s eyes. “They were a group of individual­s who looked how they imagined the hijackers looked,” Meeropol said.

Caught up in hysteria

A divided panel of the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in New York said the men were detained “as if they were terrorists, in the most restrictiv­e conditions of confinemen­t available, simply because these individual­s were, or appeared to be, Arab or Muslim.” The appeals court said that the suit could go forward because “the suffering endured by those who were imprisoned merely because they were caught up in the hysteria of the days immediatel­y following 9/11 is not without a remedy.” The case stems from a class-action suit originally filed in 2002. It’s the third time the court has intervened in lawsuits against Ashcroft and others from Muslims who were arrested in the US following the 2001 attacks. The justices have twice sided with Ashcroft.

The odds that the court will come out differentl­y this time are long, especially because only six justices will take part. Justice Sonia Sotomayor was a member of the New Yorkbased federal appeals court that heard an earlier version of the case and Justice Elena Kagan worked on the issue when she served in the Justice Department. One seat on the nine-member high court has been empty since Justice Antonin Scalia died in February.

Four justices - a majority of those taking part on Wednesday - voted to limit the ability to sue Ashcroft in the two earlier cases. Abbasi said he harbors no anger toward the United States. If anything, he misses his time there. His brother is an American citizen and his nephew recently graduated from Penn State. He said he tried to get a visa to attend the high court hearing. “I was denied for some reason,” Abbasi said. So, too, were others who sought visas, Meeropol said. — AP

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 ??  ?? KARACHI: Ahmer Abassi talks to the Associated Press. — AP
KARACHI: Ahmer Abassi talks to the Associated Press. — AP
 ??  ?? PERL: German chancellor Angela Merkel speaks at a news conference. — AP
PERL: German chancellor Angela Merkel speaks at a news conference. — AP

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