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"Pakis
Go Home! Pakis Go Home!" chant the motley horde of plastered
white supremacists, neo-Nazis and skinheads, seemingly in sync with
the lyrics of the 'white-power' music emanating from a boom box,
perched atop a red 4x4 pick-up truck. "Now is the time to repent
the decisions which allowed these mud-people to enter our country,
take over our jobs and spread their backward culture!" shouts
the shaven-headed speaker into the battered megaphone, sending the
mob of multitudes into a frenzy and causing the pack of South Asian
teens, standing across the street, to huddle together and nervously
ebb away from the bloodthirsty pack.
Although President Bush and the US State Department have repeatedly
assured the world, that the United States has no brief against Islam
or the Muslim community, scenes witnessed at the Aryan Nation rally
in Devon, a predominantly South Asian suburb of Chicago, have become
a common occurrence throughout America since the September 11 terrorist
strikes on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Even though it has been almost a year since the terrorist strikes,
the United States is still embroiled in a post-strike crisis. The
crisis is not simply economic or political, it's a crisis of the
whole culture, of the society's entire sense of itself, of which
racism is only the most clearly visible part.
The tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, home
to approximately 200,000 Pakistanis, has been the hardest hit region
in the racist onslaught. Ikram Khan, a Pakistani businessman, whose
family owns several fast food franchises in Connecticut, spent eight
weeks in custody and was grilled repeatedly by the INS (Immigration
and Naturalisation Services), the IRS, the FBI and the US Customs
Services. His crime: being of Pakistani origin and the fact that
he had transferred several hundred thousand dollars to a bank account
in Peshawar.
Stories of victimisation abound, the most ludicrous perhaps involving
a Pakistani doctor in Boston, who was manhandled, body-searched,
handcuffed and kept in custody for a day because he committed the
'heinous' crime of making a wrong U-turn - a violation that would
normally result in a 40 dollar fine.
The grievances of these individuals, however, pale in contrast to
the case of a Pakistani doctor in Pennsylvania's Chester County,
who is awaiting trial on suspicion of producing anthrax. In a country
steeped in paranoia and on high alert against those forming a 'workable
racial profile,' the doctor came under suspicion when his neighbours
reported him to the authorities for throwing soapy water in his
own backyard. The FBI, on the basis of this information, carried
out a sting operation, broke into his house and hauled him away.
A search of the house revealed that his wife had a prescription
for Cipro, a multi-purpose antibiotic. This 'circumstantial evidence'
along with the good doctor's Muslim name and Pakistani origins provided
the FBI with cause enough to charge him.
The FBI has also focused on foreign students at college campuses
around the US, post 9/11. All Muslim students, including Pakistanis,
male or female, now have to go through a background check. It has
been estimated that over one hundred students of Pakistani origin
have been questioned across America, with a large number being detained
at least overnight. According to sources at the Pakistan Embassy,
"
these incidents are in isolation
things aren't
as bad as all that." However, community activists allege that
more than two hundred Pakistanis have been detained on a variety
of charges in Northern Virginia alone, the backyard of the Pakistan
Embassy.
This growing anti-Muslim/Pakistani sentiment in the west can be
attributed in part to a xenophobic western media, which has profiled
Muslims in the context of what it labels a 'criminal' culture. 'Jihad'
has been distorted by the media, to represent a physical threat
to the western way of life by a barbaric civilisation, unappreciative
of civilised ideals of democracy, equality of the sexes and freedom
of expression. Osama bin Laden, the Taliban and Al -Qaeda have been
projected as an integral manifestation of this 'jihadi culture.'
Terrorism has been made synonymous with Islam, and the acts of a
small band of extremists representative of the whole Muslim world.
The condemnation of the extremists - the 'fundamentalists' as they
have been termed by the popular press - has thus been liberally
superimposed on all Muslims.
America's new xenophobia has resulted in the forced repatriation
of a number of Pakistani detainees since early this year, with the
US government escorting those deported by representatives of the
INS . A Pakistani consular officer, in an interview with The Washington
Post, says: "On the human scale, it's a tragedy. But we were
given a Hobson's choice: to either grant them freedom or to let
them languish in jail." Pakistan's Interior Minister Moinuddin
Haider, visited Washington in May to protest against these deportations.
"They have not had a fair deal," he says. "These
people are not criminals and should be treated with more dignity
and respect."
The forced repatriations, however, continued, with 131 Pakistanis
deported in mid-July. The Musharraf regime, embarrassed by the number
of Pakistanis in US prisons, had initiated high-level diplomatic
efforts, spearheaded by Maleeha Lodhi, then the Pakistani ambassador
to Washington.
It is reported that INS agents escorted the Pakistani detainees,
from 22 cities across the United States, to an airport in Louisiana.
The detainees, including one woman, had been held on a variety of
charges - some arrested on immigration violations, some on criminal
charges, and some for absconding. Many of the absconders had been
resident in the US for years and are married with children. Needless
to say, these deportations not only disrupted their lives, but those
of their families as well. It is also reported that the detainees
were 'loosely' handcuffed on board, given 'specially blessed' meals
and allowed to watch three in-flight movies.
One of the deportees, Mr. Khan, had lived in America for 11 years
and ran a small business in Los Angles prior to his detention in
February this year. "For me America was a dreamland - the land
of the free. I used to think I was lucky to live in a liberal and
democratic country. But the dreamland became hell for me after September
11," he says. "Even if I was not carrying valid documents
to stay there, I did not deserve such treatment. I was treated badly
because I am a Muslim. Being a Muslim should not be a crime. Not
every Muslim is an extremist or a terrorist."
Like Mr. Khan, most of the deportees complain of ill treatment by
the US authorities. Jahanzeb Zulfikar, 28, detained since April,
is one of them. "I went to the US on a student visa when I
was 17 years old, and lived in Iowa. I never thought I would be
put through such mental torture. My rights were abused, my dignity
violated and my self-respect compromised in the detention centre.
Pakistan is co-operating with America in its fight against terrorists
- and America, in return, is treating all Pakistanis as terrorists.
Is this American justice?"
Public resentment against General Musharraf's support to the United
States in the latter's 'war against terror' has shifted the focus
of attention from neighbouring conflicts to the resultant problem
of internal unrest and attacks on foreign interests. As a result,
the country's calm has been shattered by incidents such as the kidnapping
and murder of Wall Street reporter, Daniel Pearl, grenade attacks
on Christian churches and deadly bomb attacks in Karachi.
In a recent incident, residents of the village of Dandey Darpakhel
in Miranshah, North Waziristan Agency, were surprised to see a large
number of troops surrounding their village. These troops raided
an unoccupied building owned by Haji Janan Khan, on a tip that it
was housing the Taliban and members of Al-Qaeda. The tip proved
to be a hoax but it served to add to the strong resentment in Waziristan
against the Musharraf government for initiating repeated raids in
the area in search of the elusive Taliban.
Following incidents of violence, law enforcement agencies in all
urban centres have been put on high alert and have erected check-posts
at various points, conducted raids on 'suspected terrorist hideouts,'
in consonance with FBI operatives, and arrested numerous Pakistanis
as well as foreign nationals, intensified security checks at airports,
and virtually blocked the access of 'unauthorised' vehicles and
personnel to areas housing diplomats and foreign missions.
In Islamabad, a special police force, aptly named the 'Diplomat
Protection Unit,' has been constituted, which has made it difficult
for non-diplomats to enter the city's diplomatic enclave, home to
a majority of the foreign embassies and consulates.
"We are being treated like second-rate citizens in our own
country," vehemently states Maheen Khan, an aid agency worker
in Islamabad, whose job requires regular visits to the diplomatic
enclave. "Every time I go to the diplomatic enclave, I have
to park way behind the police set parameter and find my way around
on foot, which is quite discomforting, given the oppressive summer
heat."
In the face of increasing threats of future terrorist strikes
inside Pakistan coupled with tensions at the border, many countries
have chosen to close down their embassies and recall their staff.
Such actions have not only had diplomatic repurcussions but have
also created great hurdles for Pakistanis trying to obtain foreign
visas. Many diplomatic missions are now no longer entertaining visa
applications and Pakistanis are thus being barricaded within the
confines of their homeland.
There have also been
many instances of students being granted admission at reputable
American and British universities, but being denied visas from the
concerned embassies. "I got letters of acceptance from Cornell,
Brown and Amherst and was extremely keen on joining Cornell, of
which my father is an alumnus but my visa application was rejected.
This, despite the fact that my documentation was in order and I
had a letter from the university," says Kamran Butt, a student
from Lahore. "At first I was heartbroken - my dreams shattered.
I have now enrolled at a prestigious institution in the city and
am enjoying life in my hometown."
There have been numerous reports of students in a similar quandary
all over the country. A faculty member of a prestigious business
school in Lahore states, "Our applicant pool has increased
significantly since 9/11 and is expected to exhibit a continuous
upward trend given this prevailing phobia of Pakistanis and Muslims
in the West."
Many American and British universities now discourage Pakistani
students from applying, due to the "prevailing state of affairs
in their home region." A Pakistani applicant was shocked late
last year, to receive an e-mail from a Duke University professor,
calling him "a potential security risk," telling him that
his "kind" were "unwelcome in the United States."
Although the professor was reprimanded by the school board and later
apologised for his rash comments, this incident is a poignant depiction
of the state of mind of the so-called 'liberal and educated' segment
of the American society.
It remains to be seen if these restrictions on the lives of Pakistanis
and Muslims living in the US and in Pakistan are just the temporary
measures of an overanxious and paranoid populace. Given America's
future plans in the Gulf, however, it is doubtful if US officials
will call off the current state of red alert. Ironically, whilst
Pakistan overextends itself in friendship with the US, America is
rapidly fortifying herself against her 'profiled' foe.
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