By Chris Hedges
  Truthdig    on Feb 11,  2007
 Editor's note: Despite spending an estimated $80 million, the  government was unable to prove that Dr. Sami Al-Arian was a terrorist, yet he  remains in prison and his sentence will likely be extended. Pulitzer  Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges warns that the abusive imprisonment of  this nonviolent Palestinian dissenter does not bode well for the rest of  us. 
 Professor Sami Al-Arian, whose persecution and show trial are parts of a long string of egregious acts of injustice perpetrated by the Bush administration, has been on a hunger strike since Jan. 22 to protest the prolongation of his imprisonment.
Al-Arian's travels through the halls of American justice, and now the  subterranean corridors of the nation's Stygian prison system, reads like a bad  rip-off of Kafka. Al-Arian was acquitted on eight of the 17 counts against him  by a Florida jury, which deadlocked on the rest. He agreed to plead guilty to  one of the remaining charges four months later in exchange for being released  and deported. The judge gave Al-Arian as much prison time as possible under a  plea deal57 months at his sentencing. He was set to be released this April,  something that now appears unlikely. 
 The trial was a stinging rebuke to the Bush administration's drive to turn  the American judicial system into kangaroo courts. Over the six-month trial a  parade of 80 witnesses, including 21 from Israel, attempted to brand the Florida  professor as a terrorist. The government submitted thousands of documents, phone  interceptions and physical surveillance culled from 12 years of investigations.  The trial cost taxpayers an estimated $80 million. The 94 charges against  Al-Arian and his co-defendants resulted in no convictions. But because Al-Arian  has twice refused to testify before a grand jury in Virginia in a case involving  a Muslim think tank, he has now been charged with contempt of court. The date of  his release could be extended by as much as 18 months. 
 Al-Arian, who is a diabetic, began a hunger strike in response. 
 "I believe that freedom and human dignity are more precious than life  itself," he said in a telephone interview from Northern Neck Regional Jail in  Warsaw, Va. "In, essence I am taking a principled stand that I am willing to  endure whatever it takes to win my freedom. 
 "I am still OK," he said. "I have lost 26 pounds by today. It's definitely  not easy, but I am determined to continue. It's not a decision you make  haphazardly or something that you take lightly. In the end, you have to make  difficult decisions because of the larger cause. I drink four large cups of  water a day, about 12 ounces each." 
 Dr. Al-Arian said he will remain on a hunger strike until the government  ends its campaign against him and allows him to return to his wife and children.  
 The case and continued harassment sets a dangerous precedent for American  Muslims, who since 9/11 have been monitored, detained and deported in large  numbers.  But it bodes ill for the rest of us as well. The new legislation  suspending habeas corpus and creating the possibility of legally stripping U.S.  citizens of their right to a fair and timely trial is a taste of what awaits us  all should we enter a period of instability or national crisis. In many ways the  assault against Al-Arian is an assault against the judicial system that lies  like a barrier between us and despotism.  
 "Much of the government's evidence against me were speeches I gave,  lectures I presented, articles I wrote, magazines I edited, books I owned,  conferences I convened, rallies I attended, interviews I conducted, news I heard  and websites no one accessed...In one instance, the evidence consisted of a  conversation that one of my co-defendants had with me in his dream," he said.  "It was reminiscent of the thought crime of Orwell's 'Nineteen Eighty-Four.' The  scary part was not that these were offered into evidence, but that a federal  judge admitted them. That's why I am so proud of the jury, who acted as the free  people that they were and saw through Big Brother's tactics. 
 "I've been to nine prisons in nine months," he explained. "I spent the  first 23 months in Coleman Federal Penitentiary, where the conditions were  Guantanamo-plus, that is they were like those of the detainees in Guantanamo Bay  'plus' one phone call a month and visits with my family behind glass.  I  was in a nine-foot-by-eight-foot cell, where I was held under 23-hour lockdown.  During the first few months, they wouldn't even allow me to exercise unless I  was strip-searched, which I refused to submit to, so I was inside 24 hours.  During the first month, I was allowed only one 15-minute phone call, and for six  months after that I was not allowed to make any calls. 
 "I was shackled and handcuffed every single time I left my cell for any  reason," he said. "When I needed to take my legal papers for meetings with my  attorney, the guards would not carry them for me, even though they did for other  prisoners. Though I was shackled, they forced me to carry them on my back, as I  was bent over. I had to walk like that for half a mile. I should also mention  the use of fire alarms in trying to disrupt life. In the Special Housing Unit  [SHU], a punitive section of the prison where I was the only pretrial detainee,  alarms and emergency sirens would go off 15 to 20 times every single day, at 12  a.m., 2 p.m., any time of the day. It was a deafening noise that would continue  for five to 10 minutes. It was clearly deliberate. In the SHU, commissary was  almost nonexistent. All they offered was potato chips, whereas in the general  compound everything was available. The SHU was designed for disciplinary  purposes, not for housing a pretrial detainee. 
 "Not only did they place me in the SHU, but they imposed additional  restrictions on me," he went on. "For instance, everybody else was granted  contact visits, while I had to see my family behind glass. They also insisted on  strip-searching me before and after these behind-the-glass visits. In May 2003,  my wife drove two hours to see me, but they denied her the visit when I would  not submit to a strip search." 
 Al-Arian is a Palestinian. The injustice meted out to him in America is  writ large in the Middle East. He has no passport, no home, no country. He must  live on the charity of others, stateless, as most Palestinians are, and without  the rights of the citizens around him. He once thought America would be his  home.  He was, before this charade, in the process of gaining citizenship.  All this is over. In George Bush's America there is no place for activists or  dissidents. And when they finish with those on the margins of our society they  will turn, if we let them, on the rest of us.
  
1 comment:
there is a citizens movement to restore habeas corpus and bring justice to Guantanamo and other U.S. detention facilities
join us at:
projecthamad.org
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