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Internment Camps for Arab Americans
yunus
07/21/02 at 13:54:17

http://www.freep.com/news/metro/civil20_20020720.htm
Arabs in U.S. could be held, official warns
Rights unit member foresees detainment

July 20, 2002

BY NIRAJ WARIKOO
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

A member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission said
in Detroit on Friday he could foresee a scenario in
which the public would demand internment camps
for ArabAmericans if Arab terrorists strike again in
this country.

If there's a future terrorist attack in America "and
they come from the same ethnic group that attacked
the World Trade Center, you can forget about civil
rights," commission member Peter Kirsanow said.

The reason, he said, is that "the public would be
less concerned about any perceived erosion of civil
liberties than they are about protecting their own
lives."

Kirsanow, who was appointed to the commission
last year by President George W. Bush, said after
the session that he personally doesn't support such
camps and the government would never envision
them. He said he was merely saying public opinion
would so strongly favor the idea that it would be
difficult to prevent. There would be a "groundswell
of opinion" for the detainment, he said.

The remarks came during a raucous commission
hearing in Detroit in which Kirsanow and another
conservative member, Jennifer Braceras, defended
U.S. antiterrorism efforts after Sept. 11.

"They had their own political agenda," said Kary
Moss, executive director of the Michigan chapter of
the American Civil Liberties Union, referring to
Braceras and Kirsanow.

A White House spokesman said Friday night that
he could not respond specifically to Kirsanow's
comments without seeing a full transcript of them,
but said that the possibility of Arab internment
camps has never been discussed at the White
House.

"The president has said repeatedly and often that
this is not a war against Arabs or Islam, this is a war
against terror," White House spokesman Scott
Stanzel said. "We have very close allies in the Arab
world who are integral partners in the war against
terrorism. . . . The president has said that ours is a
war against evil and extremists and that the
teachings of Islam are the teachings of peace and
good."

Stanzel said that as of Friday he was "still looking
into the matter" of Kirsanow's comments.

The seven-member commission, based in
Washington, D.C., was at the Omni Hotel in Detroit
for its monthly meeting, and heard testimony from
Arab-American leaders who said the government
abused civil rights following Sept. 11.

"It's becoming really ugly," said Imad Hamad,
regional director of the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee, during his
testimony.

Hamad and others expressed concern about mass
interviews of Arab men, secret immigration hearings
and profiling of drivers and airplane passengers.

Kirsanow was unmoved, arguing that Arab and
Muslim Americans should accept the country's new
antiterrorism laws and complain less about
infringements to their civil rights.

If there's another attack by Arabs on U.S. soil, "not
too many people will be crying in their beer if there
are more detentions, more stops, more profiling,"
Kirsanow said.

"There will be a groundswell of public opinion to
banish civil rights. So the best thing we can do to
preserve them is by keeping the country safe."

At one point during the hearing, Roland Hwang, a
Lansing attorney, recalled how
Japanese-Americans were interned during World
War II and said this country needs to prevent that
from happening again.

It was at this point that Kirsanow broached the
possibility of a rising public sentiment for internment
camps if the U.S. were attacked again.

Braceras, another Bush appointee, said:"There's no
constitutional right not to be inconvenienced or even
embarrassed."

Kirsanow, a Cleveland labor attorney, is the former
head of the conservative Center for New Black
Leadership.

After the meeting, Hamad said he felt insulted by
some of the commission's remarks.

Braceras said she didn't intend to upset the
Arab-American community of metro Detroit, the
largest concentration in the United States. "I was
trying to be a devil's advocate," she said.

Contact NIRAJ WARIKOO at 734-432-6501 or
warikoo@freepress.com.


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