Los Angeles Times

Anti-Muslim incidents on the rise

A prominent rights group documents a 57% increase in crimes and other acts last year from 2015.

- By Jaweed Kaleem jaweed.kaleem @latimes.com

The number of anti-Muslim incidents and crimes in the U.S. surged last year to some of the highest levels seen in recent times, according to a new report from a prominent Muslim civil rights organizati­on.

The report by the Council on American-Islamic Relations documented a 57% increase in anti-Muslim incidents last year compared with 2015.

The victims included mosques set on fire, women whose hijabs were pulled off while walking down the street, Muslim groups that received threatenin­g letters and Muslims who were denied jobs or promotions because of their faith or were “inappropri­ately targeted” for questionin­g by the FBI or other government agencies, the report said.

To produce the report, released Tuesday, CAIR investigat­ed thousands of calls and emails made to dozens of its offices around the U.S. and reviewed data from national and local media reports. The process included interviews with witnesses and police.

Not all the incidents were reported to police or documented as crimes by law enforcemen­t. CAIR said its report was a “mere snapshot of the experience­s of the American Muslim community.” Officials suggested the report offered a more accurate picture than police data because anti-Muslim crimes were “vastly underrepor­ted to both law enforcemen­t and community institutio­ns.”

“It is time for the Trump administra­tion to seriously address the growing antiminori­ty sentiment in our nation,” said Corey Saylor, who co-wrote the report and is the director of CAIR’s Department to Monitor and Combat Islamophob­ia.

Saylor said the rise was “prompted at least in part” by President Trump during last year’s campaign, including his promise to ban Muslim travel into the U.S. and his declaratio­n that “Islam hates us.”

Saylor also cited the president’s “toxic campaign rhetoric, the appointmen­t of Islamophob­es to policymaki­ng posts and the introducti­on of Islamophob­ic policies such as the ‘Muslim ban.’”

Out of 4,282 “potential bias” cases reported to CAIR last year, the group found 52% of them to have an “identifiab­le element of religious, ethnic or national origin bias.”

CAIR broke down the incidents into five categories, with harassment being the most common. It made up 18% of events.

“Inappropri­ate” questionin­g or “targeting” by the FBI was second most common and accounted for 15% of cases. It was followed by employment-discrimina­tion-related issues (13%) and hate crimes (12%).

Last was “denial of religious accommodat­ion,” including women being told they couldn’t wear hijabs at work or people denied Korans while in jail or prison.

Saylor said reports made to CAIR had steadily increased over the years. In 2015, Muslims reported 3,786 incidents to the group. CAIR found 37% of those were targeted against the Islamic faith. The year prior, CAIR determined that just under 40% of the 3,359 reports it received were about anti-Muslim incidents.

Among the thousands of potentiall­y anti-Muslim incidents, CAIR counted 260 of them as hate crimes.

Some were already designated by law enforcemen­t as hate crimes. Others were deemed by CAIR attorneys to legally qualify as hate crimes.

A hate crime is a legal designatio­n as determined by the FBI. CAIR counted 180 hate crimes in 2015, which was up from 38 in 2014.

Among those CAIR tracked last year:

8 The January attack of a Bangladesh­i American man in New York City by two teens who yelled, “ISIS, ISIS!” at him before punching him in his head and kicking him while he was on the ground.

8 A February incident in which a man in Missouri yelled, “You Muslim? All of you should die!” and pointed a gun at a Muslim couple shopping for homes in his neighborho­od.

8 The October arrest of three militia members from a Kansas group called “the Crusaders” who were charged with planning to bomb a mosque and an apartment complex where Somalis lived.

Last fall, the FBI reported a 67% increase in hate crimes against Muslims in 2015 compared with the previous year. The FBI has not yet released its 2016 hate-crime report.

Nearly 35% of the antiMuslim incidents last year happened after perpetrato­rs noticed a person’s ethnicity or national origin and made a connection to Islam, according to CAIR.

The group said the second most common kind of “trigger” was a woman’s hijab, or head scarf. About 16% of incidents last year — 346 — targeted women with hijabs.

The next most frequent factor was a person having a Muslim-sounding name. Those kinds of incidents made up 8% of the crimes and harassment cataloged.

The targeting of mosques and other worship spaces accounted for 5% of antiMuslim incidents.

Residences were the top targets of anti-Muslim incidents last year. The group found homes to be the site of 385 of the events in its report. Educationa­l facilities were the second most common. They were the top locations for anti-Muslim incidents in 2015.

In 2015 and 2014, homes did not make the top five list of places for crimes and harassment against Muslims.

CAIR officials said their data on triggers — why people were targeted — and the location of incidents suggested that people with an anti-Muslim bias were becoming more likely to direct their attacks against specific people.

 ?? Bo Rader Wichita Eagle ?? FBI SPECIAL AGENT in Charge Eric Jackson discusses a foiled plot last fall to bomb a mosque and an apartment complex in Kansas where Somalis lived.
Bo Rader Wichita Eagle FBI SPECIAL AGENT in Charge Eric Jackson discusses a foiled plot last fall to bomb a mosque and an apartment complex in Kansas where Somalis lived.

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