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Charges Dropped Against Last of 'Los Angeles Eight'
For the last 20 years, the U.S. government has accused me of being a terrorist. Along with six other Palestinians and a Kenyan, we were dubbed the "Los Angeles Eight" by the media. Our case even made it to the U.S. Supreme Court.
On Oct. 30 - 20 grueling years after the early morning raid in which armed federal agents barged into my apartment, brutally arrested me before my 3-year-old son's eyes, incarcerated me in maximum security cells in San Pedro State Prison for 23 days without bond, and attempted to deport me - the government dropped all charges fabricated against me. The charges involved accusations of aiding a member group of the Palestine Liberation Organization that the government alleged aided terrorism. But Los Angeles immigration Judge Bruce J. Einhorn had ordered an end to the deportation proceedings against us last January because the government failed to comply with his order to disclose evidence that supported our innocence. He called their behavior "an embarrassment to the rule of law."
Why did the U.S. government spend 20 years trying to ban us from this country? Because we tried to educate Americans about the situation facing millions of Palestinians living in apartheid-like conditions under Israeli military occupation. Because we organized fundraisers to provide Palestinians with humanitarian support. And because we attended demonstrations to urge a shift in U.S. policy away from unconditional financial and diplomatic support of Israel.
The government robbed us and our families of the best and most productive years of our lives. For more than 20 years, they vilified us in public without recourse. We'll never be able to entirely erase the negative words and images they manufactured about us. Our case is a stark example, and is different only in degree, from what routinely befalls those who call for equal rights for Palestinians and press for a fair Middle East U.S. policy consistent with international law. In February of this year, two others who advocated equal rights for Palestinians - Mohammed Salah and Abdelhaleem Ashqar - were found not guilty of terrorism charges based in part on evidence provided by Israel and obtained through the use of torture.
President Carter, university professors John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt and Nobel laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu face charges of anti-Semitism and shoddy scholarship meant to intimidate, discredit and silence them.
And it may be surprising, but I don't hold a grudge. Throughout this 20-year plus ordeal, we never lost faith that we would win against this political and legal oppression. Not only because of our innocence, but because of the tremendous, unfaltering support that we enjoyed all these years across religious, ethnic and civic communities, and a legal team that did not waver once in its commitment to justice. This incredible support has taught us more about America than we could have learned in two lifetimes; the support of such people who are a living example and a role model for immigrants - to positively engage with the issues facing the country on a daily basis. Struggling to make the place a bit better than when we arrived is what made America home to us. We made that choice, and we're the better for it.
My two American-born sons learned though this experience the meaning of establishing a strong grassroots connection and of getting involved with their community. The words justice, freedom, equality and civil liberties are not words they learned in school that will become empty clichés as they grow older. They are concepts that have real meaning to them, that affect their family and community. They know that they must be vigilantly protected, especially when the issues they advocate are not popular, or at times of war, and conflict, when the first causalities are our basic freedoms - free speech, the right to dissent and to disagree with the government - the very basis of democracy.
From the beginning, we said that our case was a political one and that the government made us victims of a political witch-hunt. We persevered all these years and defeated the attempt to uproot us from our communities, break our families apart, and deport us, because we were innocent. Free at last, we are finally exonerated and it tastes sweet. We will savor the sweetness. And we will use it to fuel our determination to defend the same issues that our supporters defended through us: justice, civil liberties, freedom and immigrant rights. We believe that this is the America for which we continually aspire, the America that is just, here at home and in faraway places - with policies based on fairness, equality, and a shared humanity.
Michel Shehadeh is a research associate in the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Initiative in the College of Ethnic Studies at San Francisco State University.
© 2007 The San Francisco Chronicle
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11 Comments so far
Show AllCongratulations to the author and the others wronged in that travesty of justice that you were subjected to.
I am amazed that the author does not hold a grudge, because if it were me I would not let the people who procescuted me have a moments rest!
When does the civil suit get filed? I would be all over the FBI like ugly on a republican.
I hold a grudge, and I crave retribution for the gross misconduct of the government officials involved, especially the various government attorneys that sanctioned this abuse of authority. They ought to be disbarred.
Just goes to show that detaining arabs (and their sympathizers) indefinitely started when Bush the elder was the VP. And, that the US has NO interest in a peaceful resolution to the middle east conflict.
Well said Michel, and congratulations on your commitment to continue to educate us, playing on a field grossly slanted against you. The dirty tricks used attempt to silence you, are a part of the reason that most Americans have been taught to view Palestinians as the only offending party in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, practically reversing all the relevant statistics. That misinformation is purely and simply a hate crime, that several successive American administrations have been guilty of.
it's all about the u.s. occupation of the ME.
It's all about the power of the Israel lobby in this country.
A Jewish boy from Maryland kills and beheads another boy, then flees to Israel, claims citizenship under "the right of return," and is granted it. Israel refused U.S. claims for extradition, but says that the boy is serving a prison term. Is he serving it? Possibly not, but the U.S. government bought off on it.
And Robert Manning, the murderer of Alex Odeh, hid out in Israel for years until a journalist publicly exposed him. He is reportedly serving a prison term in Colorado. But I doubt if the U.S. would have pushed extradition if it had not been publicly embarrassed.
Very sad case, but very rewarding to know the man has been exhonerated.
A similar case is that of the Cuban Five, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González, Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino and René González, who are currently in U.S. maximum security prisons because they were trying to gather information to stop terrorist acts like the blowing up of a Cuban airliner which killed 73 people. But they were jailed because the people they were gathering information on were the terrorists in the employ of the U.S., namely, Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch. Luis Posada Carriles boasted on a live radio broadcast in Miami that he was the one who masterminded the downing of the Cuban airliner as just one of many acts he perpetrated on behalf of his paymaster. At one point he was in a Venezuelan prison awaiting trial for the blowing up of that Cuban passenger plane but he escaped and he is now residing in Miami with the full protection of the U.S. government. Even though the U.S. and Venezuela have an extradition treaty and Venezuela has formally requested Posada Carriles extradition, the U.S. refuses to extradite their terrorist because they claim they fear that Venezuela will torture Posada Carriles.
The U.S.A. has many political prisoners in their jails, Indigenous Americans, Hawaiians, Puerto Ricans and who knows for sure how many. But, in truth, the U.S.A. has no political prisoners because the scumbags which run the U.S. are not a legitimate government but a criminal organization. And their's is not a system which needs tweaking to make it better but one which needs to be destroyed so that scourge of humanity never again gains leverage over society.
We have a strange case here in Denmark. Just before the national elections last Tuesday, a young fellow (22) was arrested on terrorism charges. He was said to have sent email to terrorists encouraging then to kidnap Danes. The news mentioned that it was US inteligence which had tipped the Danish police.
However, two days after the election a tape surfaced where police agents are heard trying to recruit the fellow as an informer, promising him a number of things. The fellow refused and was arrested shortly thereafter. He is now in isolation for the next two weeks.
I am afraid that this sort of thing is endemic.
Congratulations! What a blessing to be finally (relatively) free again. I hope things go better for you and your family now. I hope that the injustice can be redressed and that what America stood for once can be restored.