http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_6564.shtml
Activists,
family demand justice in death of imam slain by FBI
By Ashahed M. Muhammad -Assistant
Editor-
Updated Nov 10, 2009 - 8:53:27 AM
DETROIT, Mich. (FinalCall.com) - Activists continue to demand
answers in the death of Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah, the 53-year-old leader of
Detroit's Masjid Al-Haqq gunned down by the FBI under suspicious circumstances.
Despite cold whipping winds, a spirited demonstration
demanding an independent investigation into the shooting was held on Nov. 5 at
the McNamara Federal Building. Supporters said the man described in the FBI's
43-page affidavit, and portrayed by the mainstream media as something of a
Muslim mafia don, was not the man they knew and loved.
Filled with emotion, Omar Regan, Imam Abdullah's 34-year-old
son, challenged the media to tell the truth about his father and challenged law
enforcement to reflect on their own humanity.
“It's not right for them to set up traps and try to
assassinate our character. It's not right for them to say my father, my brother
and all of their friends were a danger to their community. They're not in the
community! The community loves us!” shouted the young man who lived with Imam
Jamil al-Amin for several years as a teenager. “There are people in the
community now sad because of the loss of my father wondering if people are
still going to be there to feed them, to give them clothes to take care of
them. If they want to know about my father, go inside of the community and ask
the community who he was!”
Some in the crowd began to shed tears listening to his
heartfelt words.
“The man has 13 children and none of us have a criminal
record!” said Mr. Regan. “I want to say to the people, even the ones who are
holding the badges and holding the guns, why don't you do your research and
stop looking at it is as just a job? Find out if you truly have a heart and
stop trying to just earn a check and learn how to be decent human beings!
That's what I learned from my father! How to care about people!”
Members of the Michigan Emergency
Committee Against War and Injustice and the Detroit Coalition Against Police
Brutality spearheaded the rally to show support for Detroit's Islamic
community.
The groups said the community has come under siege from
federal and local law enforcement officials.
Members of the Nation of Islam were in attendance as well as
Muslims from a variety of mosques in the Detroit metropolitan area and
surrounding suburbs.
A broad-based coalition of activists have protested Imam
Abdullah's death, including members of the Detroit Green Party, and many
Christian pastors and organizations.
As the speakers addressed the crowd during rush hour, people
drove by, honked their horns in support, and waved at those gathered.
Sandra Hines, an activist with the Michigan Emergency
Committee Against War and Injustice and the Detroit Coalition Against Police
Brutality, spoke at the demonstration.
“It appears as if this whole incident that took place was
entrapment by the FBI and it almost makes you feel that they may possibly be
some kind of front group against people of color,” said Ms. Hines.
“They have not cracked down on these right wing groups,” said
Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan African News Wire. “They have even shown up
at events were the president was--armed. If we would have shown up someplace
when Bush was president--armed--we would have been shot on sight,” Mr. Azikiwe
added.
“We think people outside of the Muslim community have to take
a stand on this. The Muslim community has been under fire since 9-11,” Mr.
Azikiwe said. He called on President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder to
“stop the murderous policies against Muslims in this country.”
Neo-COINTELPRO underway
In an exclusive interview with The Final Call at the Michigan
office of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), Imam Dawud Walid,
the group's area director, and Ron Scott, head of the Detroit Coalition Against
Police Brutality both expressed concern of what they believe to be a
“neo-COINTELPRO” directed at organizations with Black Nationalist and Islamic
leanings.
COINTELPRO
was a covert operation employed by federal and local law enforcement to
disrupt and destroy Black and progressive organizations during the civil rights
and Black Power movements.
Mr. Scott said Black men labeled as “radicals” mixed with
Islam are an “obvious target” and another primary issue is funding for law
enforcement.
The multi-jurisdictional task forces of the FBI and ATF,
along with a number of agencies, want funding from the Justice Dept., so there
is motivation to keep the threat level high, he said.
“The more threat they have, the more money they get, the more
they are able to continue this, in addition to the fact of the actual bias,”
said Mr. Scott. “There has always been a Black scare coming out with the
COINTELPRO program of which I was a victim of, along with many others,” added
Mr. Scott, a former Black Panther active with the organization in the 1960s.
Increased scrutiny of Islamic charities such as the Holy Land
Foundation in Richardson, Texas, has had a “chilling effect” on American Muslim
organizations nationwide, said Imam Walid. This “was only the first step” in a
growing focus on charitable, humanitarian and service oriented groups with
members who practice Islam, he continued.
Calling the use of agent provocateurs “a national policy
issue,” Imam Walid criticized the use paid informants inside mosques,
intimidation by law enforcement and selective outrage by politicians.
In the final days of the Bush administration, former attorney
general Michael Mukasey introduced controversial new FBI guidelines related to
an initial threat assessment, he observed. Under the new guidelines, race and
religion can be used as primary factors to begin an initial assessment without
any real proof that anything is planned or whether any terrorism connections
are present.
A June 2009 study by the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) titled “Blocking Faith, Freezing Charity,” found the U.S. government's
effortswhich many activists call harassmentunfair and ineffective while
“seriously undermining American Muslims' protected constitutional liberties and
violating their fundamental human rights to freedom of religion, freedom of
association, and freedom from discrimination.”
The religious leaders of the Council of Islamic Organizations
of Michigan released a statement Nov. 6 decrying the use of informants and
agent provocateurs sent into mosques on “fishing expeditions.”
Questions about government investigation of imam's shooting
As a standard procedure, the FBI dispatched a Shooting
Incident Review Team following the fatal encounter with Imam Abdullah. The
results of the review will be forwarded to the Justice Dept. Many activists say
the FBI's nefarious dealing with Black people and organizations brings no
confidence the agency can fairly investigate itself and the actions of field
agents.
Dearborn police are involved in the investigation, which also
troubles Mr. Scott. “The Dearborn Police Department has a horrendous and
vicious history of racism and Islamophobia,” he said.
In the FBI's 43-page affidavit attached to the criminal
complaint, Imam Abdullah is described as “a highly placed leader of a
nationwide radical fundamentalist Sunni group consisting primarily of
African-Americans, some of whom converted to Islam while they were serving
sentences in various prisons across the United States. Their primary mission is
to establish a separate, sovereign Islamic state ‘The Ummah' within the borders
of the United States governed by Shariah law.”
Stemming from a federal investigation of the group which
began in 2007, the FBI said Imam Abdullah and the other defendants are charged
with running an interstate crime ring that received and sold stolen goods,
engaged in mail and insurance fraud, illegally possessed firearms and body
armor and tampered with motor vehicle identification numbers.
Andrew G. Arena, special agent in charge of Detroit's FBI
office, has consistently said his agents acted appropriately on Oct. 28 when,
according to the FBI, during a raid on a warehouse just outside of Detroit,
Imam Abdullah refused to surrender. An FBI dog was dispatched to go after him
and, according to FBI, after Imam Abdullah shot the dog, they fired, killing
him.
The narrative delivered by the FBI is widely disputed.
Members of Masjid Al-Haqq said Imam Abdullah surrendered
along with the others, and only fired on the FBI dog after the dog was
specifically sent to attack him. Family members were told Imam Abdullah was
handcuffed after being shot and left bleeding and dying, while the wounded FBI
dog was taken via medical helicopter to a treatment center. Family members ask
why officials chose not to take Imam Abdullah to the hospital after being shot,
when they argue, the only reason to handcuff him would be if he were alive
after being wounded.
Official autopsy results have not yet been released, which
adds to the uncertainty, and necessitates an independent investigation, said
activists.
Hodari Abdul-Ali, a radio host and chair of the Social Justice
Task Force for the Muslim Alliance in North America, served with Imam Abdullah
on the Majlis ash-Shura, the governing body which sets policy for the
organization. He told The Final Call everyone should speak out against
injustice, otherwise they might be the next victims.
“The FBI and all of these right wing racist hate-mongers with
microphones are just stirring up this anti-Islamic fervor around the country
and this is something that all right-minded people need to speak out against,”
said Mr. Abdul-Ali. “I think of that statement Angela Davis made back in the
day, ‘If they come for me in the morning, they'll come for you at night.'”
Imam Walid said after the initial report of the Oct. 28
shooting appeared in the media, he contacted many publications directly,
protesting some headlines, challenging news reports and telling journalists not
to simply “regurgitate the government line.”
When asked by The Final Call why it appeared as if the
preliminary information about the shooting was so sensationalistic and
inaccurate, he attributed the problem to “lazy reporting.”
“With so much left unknown in the developing case, MPAC is
warning government agencies and media outlets of the alarming exploitation of
this isolated incident that is stigmatizing Muslim American communities around
the country,” said the Muslim Public Affairs Committee, in a statement.
“This imam was for the Yemeni community, for the Black
community, for the Latino community. We know him as a person who feeds the
hungry, opens his home, opens his mosque, he would give you the coat off his
body for you to be warm,” said Ibrahim Aljahim, president of the Detroit-based
Arab American Outreach.
“This was a set up by the government. We have to wake up and
realize it. He was getting stronger and stronger and they didn't want that,”
said Mr. Aljahim. Many strong leaders, such as Minister Louis Farrakhan of the
Nation of Islam, are also feared and targeted, added Mr. Aljahim.
Mr. Scott agreed. “It is a very dangerous situation and it is
being pushed via propaganda. And it is either allowed to be done, or planned,
so that any potential unification of Islam whether it is between Arabs and
African Americans, or unification of younger and older African Americans, and
unification of any group of people who are in favor of progressive movement,
that is what they are concerned about,” said Mr. Scott. “That is why I believe
they are beginning to start a new movement and Muslims are an obvious target
and African-American Muslims are a specific target.”
Racial, religious profiling root of terror cases? (FCN,
10-26-2009)
The strange saga of an alleged FBI-paid instigator (FCN,
09-11-2009)
Skepticism about dubious plot in New York (FCN, 06-01-2009)
Cointelpro 2009: FBI up to old dirty tricks? (FCN,
04-18-2009)
The FBI-Manufactured Plot to Kill Farrakhan (03-1995)
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