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  • 23
    Oct
    2012
    3:54pm, EDT

    'No-fly' American battles his way home to New York

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    A New York City man prevented from returning home from overseas by the federal government’s security apparatus has landed in the United States after a three-week delay, rights advocates say.  


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Samir Suljovic, 26, entered the United States on Friday night in Philadelphia, where he was questioned at length by Customs and Border Protection agents, causing him to miss his connecting flight to New York. He boarded a train, arriving in New York late Monday night.

    Suljovic, who was born and raised in Queens, told NBC New York he believes he was banned from flying because he's Muslim.

    "I wear a cap, I have a beard, I roll my pants up," Suljovic he told the NBC station. "They discriminated against me because I'm Muslim. What else could it be?"


    "They made me feel like I'm some kind of terrorist, some kind of criminal for no damn reason," he said. "I'm an American citizen. I'm being played here."

    Suljovic, who has worked as a security guard in New York, had been visiting relatives in Montenegro and was attempting to come home on Oct. 1 when he was denied boarding his U.S.-bound flight from Vienna, Austria. 

    His story echoes those of dozens of other Americans, many of them Muslims, who have been stranded overseas by their apparent inclusion on the U.S. "no-fly" list, prompting legal challenges to the government.

    Related content:
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    U.S. security watch lists currently have about 50,000 names, of which about 20,000 are on the 'no-fly' list of people who are "known and reasonably suspected terrorists," and among those are about 500 Americans, according to an official at the FBI Terrorist Screening Center, who asked not to be named.

    The official would not say whether Suljovic’s name was on the no-fly list.

    "Government policy is not to disclose that for security reasons," said the official. As an example, the official said, an aspiring terrorist who learned he or she was listed might change his or her identity.

    Airline ticket agents in Vienna handed Suljovic a note from the Department of Homeland Security and instructed him to apply for a redress number for people who think they may be mistakenly on the "no-fly list."

    The Department of Homeland Security redress procedure, which goes by the acronym TRIP for Travel Redress Inquiry Program, is set up to weed out people who are on the list because of mistaken identity. The TRIPS process does not provide a way for people who think they are wrongly placed on the list for other reasons to challenge those reasons.

    Also from NBC New York: Barney's super skinny Minnie Mouse sparks protests

    The U.S. Embassy in Vienna told Suljovic he was cleared for a flight back to the United States from Munich, Germany.

    But after traveling by train to Munich, he was again denied boarding and instructed to go to the U.S. consulate there, where he did not get resolution. He says that he was instead interrogated by embassy personnel who also searched his cellphone without his permission.

    The Council on American Islamic Relations, a nonprofit Muslim advocacy and civil rights group, wrote letters to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano and the U.S. Embassy in Munich seeking an explanation of obstacles to his return home.

    Suljovic told NBC New York on Monday he had to eat the cost of two flights that he was prohibited from boarding, and spent about $2,000 in Vienna and Munich while trying to get clearance to go home.

    "I was like a mouse in a maze. I didn't know where to go, and I was wondering when I'd come home," he said. "I had nowhere to stay. I slept at the airport for the first few days." 

    Suljovic said he's frustrated that government officials haven't been able to tell him why he couldn't come home, and that they haven't been able to tell him if he is on the no-fly list at all.

    After a number of tries over the course 22 days, Suljovic was finally allowed to board the flight to Philadelphia on Friday. No explanation was given for his delays, or for his ultimate ability to fly home.

    The opaqueness of U.S. security policy has prompted a a number of challenges to the use of the no-fly list. The most significant case, working its way through courts in Oregon, was brought by the ACLU in 2010 on behalf of 17 plaintiffs against the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI Terrorist Screening Center. That case challenges the constitutionality of the no-fly list, arguing that it deprives individuals of due process.

    A separate lawsuit filed in April by the Michigan chapter of CAIR alleges invasive questioning of American Muslims by CPB officials at land borders.

    "Samir is back in the United States because it is his right to be here,” said Muneer Awad, executive director for the New York chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations. "It is his right today, and it was his right twenty-two days ago when our government prevented him from boarding any return flight home."

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    362 comments

    I feel for the guy, but the issue of muslim terrorists remains. So what are we to do? Let anyone fly and risk losing hundreds of American lives? I understand that "show me your papers" smacks of 'brown shirts', but this is not 1940's Europe and this country has already been under fire, and continues …

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    Explore related topics: muslim, security, terrorism, civil-rights, no-fly-list, featured, kari-huus, samir-suljovic
  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    2:55pm, EDT

    Napolitano: Feds check foreign students seeking pilot training

    By Pete Williams, NBC News

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says the federal government has closed a gap and does review the backgrounds of foreign students who seek to take pilot training at U.S. flight schools.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    She added that an American citizen on the no-fly list would not be able to take flight training, contrary to what an administration official said at a Congressional hearing on Wednesday.

    Responding to a GAO report out Wednesday that said some number, which was not revealed, of foreign students don't receive background checks, Napolitano told the House Homeland Security committee Thursday that the GAO report was not up to date.


    "In 2010, we took steps to be sure all foreign students are vetted. We've been doing it for two years."

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    She said GAO faulted Homeland for having no written policy requiring the vetting all foreign students.  Napolitano said that memorandum is being drawn up now but added that the checks have been done even without having the policy in writing.

    As for Americans on the no-fly list, Napolitano said they would not be able to take flight training and that officials who testified Wednesday to the contrary "were not aware of all the other things that can occur" that would be prevent them from enrolling.  A Homeland Security official says other checks, that are classified, would stop someone on the no-fly list from being approved for flight training at a U.S. school.

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    34 comments

    It's interesting that Napolitano claims that all foreign students attending flights schools have been vetted for the last two years. That must be a bald-face lie since it was just announced yesterday that 25 foreign students who had either been in this country illegally or overstayed their visas, ha …

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    Explore related topics: homeland-security, no-fly-list, featured, janet-napolitano, foreign-students, pete-williams
  • 8
    Jun
    2012
    5:38pm, EDT

    California grad student on no-fly list gets home after stranding

    An American student stranded abroad by the government's no-fly list has walked across the U.S. border instead in order to get home. KNSD-TV's Tony Shin reports.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    An American student who discovered he was included on the government’s no-fly list and was barred from a U.S.-bound flight from Costa Rica was reunited with family and friends after he flew to Mexico and then walked across the U.S.-Mexico border Thursday evening.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Kari Huus


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    Kevin Iraniha, 27, was met at the San Ysidro crossing south of his home in San Diego by his father and two brothers as well as some supporters and reporters after a two-day delay that included FBI questioning and rerouting his trip through Mexico City and Tijuana.

    "I'm happy to be home, finally in my hometown where I was born and raised," Iraniha told NBC San Diego, but he added that what happened to him "was very tiring and very depressing."


    "Obviously he was relieved to see his family, to be back in San Diego, home. It was quite an emotional moment to see him for his family for his friends," said Hanif Mohebi, executive director of the San Diego chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations, a nonprofit civil rights group.

    Iraniha had recently completed a master’s degree program in Costa Rica. He had celebrated his graduation with his father and brothers, but was stopped on Tuesday when he tried to check in for his flight.

    Iraniha is a practicing Muslim whose father was born in Iran. He said he was questioned extensively by FBI agents at the U.S. Embassy in San Jose about his religious beliefs, practices and affiliations, and about his recent travels to destinations including Iran, where he has relatives. 

    Iraniha family

    Kevin Iraniha, after earning a masters degree in international law in Costa Rica, poses with his brothers Jahan, left, Shervin, second from left, and his father, Nasser, right. When he tried to return home to the United States, the San Diego native was barred from U.S.-bound flights.

    See original report on msnbc.com.

    He was not told why he was placed on the no-fly list, according to Mohebi, but was told he could return to the United States by alternative means.

    Iraniha's brothers and father all were allowed to board aircraft flying directly to the United States.

    Citing the U.S. Privacy Act and security reasons, the FBI will not confirm nor deny an individual’s inclusion on the no-fly list, which is intended to safeguard U.S. aviation. More than 20,000 individuals are on the list, including about 500 U.S. citizens, according to the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center, which maintains the list. These individuals are barred from all domestic flights and international flights that enter U.S. air space.

    Mohebi said that Iraniha was staying out of the public eye for a few days as he recovers from the ordeal and decides how to proceed.

    Related reporting:

    American seeks political asylum in Sweden alleging torture, FBI coercion
    American aid worker: U.S. bars my return
    What gives? Another American in Libya no-fly limbo 
    Bittersweet homecoming for Libyan-American caught in no-fly limbo
    No-fly Muslim takes case to court of public opinion

    There are currently two major lawsuits challenging the federal government on its use of the no-fly list, its lack of transparency and an apparent lack of recourse for people who find themselves restricted by it.

    "Now that he is safely home, we can discuss the larger issue of how it is that people get onto that list," said Mohebi. "If an individual is dangerous enough that he should not be flying, shouldn’t he be arrested, brought to court, tried and prosecuted?  And if this individual is dangerous enough not to fly (to the United States), why should he be allowed to fly to other countries … and drive in or walk across the border?"

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    376 comments

    I defiantly feel there is a place for the no fly list, but how its used needs to change. Any US citizen that is added to it should have to be informed when it happens, and told exactly why they are on the list. Anyone on the list should also have a means to challenge their inclusion since there are  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: muslim, security, terrorism, islam, no-fly-list, kari-huus
  • 7
    Jun
    2012
    3:16pm, EDT

    California student takes the long way home to US after 'no-fly' designation

    Iraniha family

    Kevin Iraniha, after graduating from an international law program in Costa Rica, with his brothers Jahan, far left, and Shervin, second from left. His father, Nasser Iraniha, is on the right.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    A U.S. citizen from San Diego who was barred from boarding a flight home from Costa Rica — apparently because he has been placed on the U.S. no-fly list — was attempting to fly to Mexico and cross into the United States by land on Thursday, attorneys familiar with his case said.

    Kevin Iraniha, 27, had just completed his master's degree in international law at a United Nations-affiliated Peace University in Costa Rica and was preparing to return home on Tuesday when he was refused boarding, according to Munia Jabbar, a staff attorney with the Council on American Islamic Relations, or CAIR, a non-profit civil rights group.


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    Kari Huus


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    Iraniha went to the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica, where he was questioned extensively by FBI agents about his religious beliefs, his attendance and contacts at mosques in Costa Rica, and whether he was involved in activities that presented a threat, Jabbar said.

    Iraniha was born and raised in San Diego. His father is an Iranian-born U.S. citizen, and his mother is a native-born U.S. citizen.


    The officials indicated he was on the U.S. no-fly list of people who are prohibited from boarding domestic flights or international flights that enter U.S. airspace. The list has grown from just a few names prior to Sept. 11, 2001, when Islamic extremists used commercial flights to attack the United States, to a roster of about 20,000 names, including about 500 U.S. citizens in 2012.

     

    In order to get home, Iraniha booked an alternative flight to Mexico City and onward to Tijuana, and planned to drive over the border to San Diego.

    Kevin Iraniha could not immediately be reached by phone, but his brother Jahan said that he had received messages confirming arrival in Mexico City and imminent boarding of a flight for Tijuana. Family members were planning to go to the Mexican border to meet Iraniha Thursday evening, according to Jahan Iraniha, who declined further comment until Friday.

    "At this moment we are trying to get him safely home, and we will look at the details and questions in coming days," said Hanif Mohebi, executive director of CAIR San Diego.

    Dozens of Americans — primarily Muslims — have been stranded overseas by the no-fly list. As in Iraniha’s case, many discover they are on the list only when they are at an airport trying to check in for a flight.

    Related reporting:

    American seeks political asylum in Sweden alleging torture, FBI coercion
    American aid worker: U.S. bars my return
    What gives? Another American in Libya no-fly limbo 
    Bittersweet homecoming for Libyan-American caught in no-fly limbo
    No-fly Muslim takes case to court of public opinion

    The no-fly list does not bar American citizens from returning to the United States by land.

    But Iraniha’s ability to return is still uncertain, and there are few precedents for attempting to do so.

    Another American who found he was on the no-fly list when attempting to return to the U.S. from Bogota, Colombia, was Raymond Knaeble.  After landing in Mexico City in May 2010, with plans to travel onward by land, Knaeble was interrogated by Mexican officials for 15 hours and then deported to Bogota, according to a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.

    According to the court documents, filed on behalf of 15 plaintiffs challenging the U.S. no-fly list, Knaeble finally got back to the United States from Colombia in August 2010 by traveling by bus for 12 days.

    The no-fly list, maintained by the Terrorist Screening Center under the FBI, includes "known or reasonably suspected terrorists," according to the FBI website.

    A background check showed no criminal background for Iraniha.

    In 2010, he helped organize a peace protest to counter a planned Quran burning by anti-Muslim activists, according to the Ocean Bay Rag, a small publication in Southern California.

    Iraniha spoke to the Union Tribune of San Diego after he was initially barred from his flight and questioned by the FBI about his religious beliefs and affiliations.

    "It's discrimination," he told the publication. "I was shocked; it was really weird to have such questions being asked. First and foremost, I'm an American, and secondly, I don't believe in violence."

    The publication said Iraniha — a self-described peace activist and "beach boy" — plans to take some type of action, possibly filing a lawsuit.

    Iraniha's two brothers and his father, who had come to Costa Rica to attend his graduation, were all allowed to fly home to the United States.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and

     

    199 comments

    You have thought the US Gov't would have learned from the 1950's that black listing would come back to haunt them. Eventually the truth will get out.

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  • 7
    May
    2012
    4:59pm, EDT

    US files charges against American who alleged torture

    Claudio Bresciani / AP

    U.S. citizen Yonas Fikre, left, talks to media with his attorney, Thomas Nelson, in Stockholm, Sweden, April 18, 2012. Fikre said he was detained and tortured in the United Arab Emirates at the behest of the U.S. government. Fikre, who is on the U.S. no-fly list, is seeking asylum in Sweden.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    The U.S. government has issued an arrest warrant for an American citizen who is seeking asylum in Sweden after he went public with allegations of illegal detention and torture while in the United Arab Emirates – which he believes was carried out at the behest of the FBI.

    In newly filed documents, the U.S. government charges that Yonas Fikre, 33, an Ethiopia-born resident of Portland, Ore., was involved in money transfers set up to avoid U.S. reporting requirements. He is accused of conspiring with two other defendants — his brother Dawit Woldehawariat of San Diego and Abrehaile Haile of Seattle.


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    Kari Huus


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    "Defendants Fikre and Woldehawariat wanted to conceal from the United States their connection to the money transfers" of about $75,000, the grand jury indictment states.


    The accusation against the three is "structuring" — or using a series of bank transactions instead of conducting a larger transaction in an effort to avoid reporting the money movements to the federal government. Transactions over $10,000 require reporting.

    After Fikre traveled to Sudan in 2009, and later to the UAE, he received money transfers that he says were for starting a trading business. The document alleges that a series of $7,000 money transfers from his brother, and handled by Abrehaile Haile — who operates Red Sea Inc., a money-transmitting business in Seattle — amounted to conspiracy to structure.  

    Fikre's brother, a taxi driver, also was  charged with failing to file taxes for 2009 and 2010. He made about $26,000 in 2009 and $29,000 in 2010, the document states.

    No terrorism charges are included in the documents. 

    "Frankly, I think its retaliation and retribution," Fikre’s attorney, Thomas Nelson in Portland, said of the indictment.

    Nelson said that FBI agents questioned Fikre when they met with him in Sudan in April 2010 shortly after the transfers. 

    The indictment  filed at the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of California were dated May 1.

    Two weeks ago, Fikre went public with his story of alleged mistreatment by the FBI, and claims that he was detained and tortured in the UAE at the behest of the U.S. government.

    The FBI will not comment on individual investigations, citing security and Privacy Act concerns, nor address the allegations that it orchestrated torture.

    Fikre said that when he was detained in UAE, he was not accused of a crime. He was released without charge.

    Related reports:

    • American seeks political asylum in Sweden, alleging torture, FBI coercion
    • American aid worker in Libya: US bars my return
    • What gives? Another American in Libya no-fly limbo
    • Bittersweet homecoming for Libyan-American caught in no-fly limbo
    • No-fly Muslim takes case to court of public opinion

    Nelson said that the FBI agents used the accusation of "structuring" to pressure Fikre to become an informant in a case they were pursuing at a meeting with him in Khartoum in April 2010.

    Fikre said the agents also suggested they could help him get off the U.S. "no-fly" list if he aided their investigation — a surprise, Fikre said, because it was the first he had learned that his name was on the list of "known and reasonably suspected terrorists."

    The no-fly list is maintained by the Terrorism Screening Center within the FBI. The center will neither confirm nor deny any individual is on the list. Typically, individuals do not discover they are on the list until they are refused boarding.

    Fikre said he refused to become an FBI informant.

    After the FBI encounter, Fikre moved his business to the United Arab Emirates where he was detained and, he says, tortured for 101 days. He said the questioning about his finances continued, along with questions about people, beliefs and finances of his mosque back in Portland. Fikre says he was blindfolded, so he could not see his interrogators, but the questions were so similar to those of the FBI months earlier that he believes the questioning, accompanied by sleep deprivation, exposure to cold, stress positions and beatings, was done on behalf of the FBI.

    He is now in Stockholm where his appeal  for asylum is under review by the Swedish government.

    Fikre, a naturalized American citizen, came to the United States as a refugee in 1991, after his family fled civil war in Ethiopia. Now that he is on the no-fly list, he is barred from boarding any flight that enters U.S. air space.

    Nelson is concerned that the indictment might make his client essentially stateless.

    "Yonas tried to come back to the United States and couldn’t get in, so he went to Sweden," said Nelson. "The (Swedish) government might now claim he’s a fugitive and won’t let him in."

    Fikre’s immigration lawyer could not be immediately contacted for comment.

    The prosecution argues that Fikre's brother, Woldehawaria, 31, is a flight risk, so he is being held without bail.

    Gadeir Abbas, a staff attorney for the Council on American Islamic Relations, a nonprofit that represents Muslims in civil rights cases and advocates for American Muslim rights more broadly, said he thinks the indictment signals a warning to the population.

    "It sends the message to the community and people on the no-fly list that there will be retaliation," he said. 

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    188 comments

    Today it's this guy...tomorrow, it may be you.

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    Explore related topics: muslim, security, terrorism, islam, no-fly-list, kari-huus, yonas-fikre
  • 18
    Apr
    2012
    3:08pm, EDT

    American seeks political asylum in Sweden, alleging torture, FBI coercion

    Martin Von Krogh / for msnbc.com

    American citizen Yonas Fikre has spent the past seven months in Stockholm, Sweden, where he is seeking asylum.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    An American citizen who alleges that he was detained and tortured overseas at the behest of the U.S. government — and is now marooned as a result of the U.S. no-fly list — has filed for political asylum in Sweden, he announced with his lawyers on Wednesday.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Yonas Fikre, 33, says he spent more than three months in a Dubai detention center in 2011. In a lengthy Skype interview with msnbc.com, he described sleeping on the concrete floor of a frigid jail cell, and enduring regular interrogation, beatings and stress positions that caused him to collapse or black out.

    He was released in September, he says, but is just now going public with his story.


    Fikre’s ordeal took place outside the United States — far from his home in Portland, Ore. — but he and his American lawyer say they believe it was orchestrated by the FBI in connection with an investigation in Portland. And they maintain that Fikre’s inclusion on the no-fly list — which bars him from boarding U.S.-bound flights — has been used as a tool to coerce information, not because he presents a risk to U.S. flights.

    "There is a practice and policy by the FBI to gratuitously deny the rights of American Muslims, particularly naturalized immigrant Muslims when they want to get more information," said Thomas Nelson, a Portland attorney representing Fikre. "In the case of Mr. Fikre …  we believe and will allege that they also engaged in torture by proxy. This is shocking. This is a dark day for America."

    Limited scope of no-fly list
    The government, citing security reasons, will not say why any individual is on the no-fly list or even confirm that they are included. However, the names are rigorously screened and regularly reviewed, according to a spokesman at the Terrorist Screening Center, a division of the FBI that maintains watch lists.

    The Department of Justice reviewed Fikre’s case in response to a complaint from Nelson on behalf of Fikre and two others clients on the no-fly list, and said that it did not find cause for action.

    "Based on our review, we have concluded that no action by this Office is warranted," said a letter from the department’s Office of Professional Responsibility dated March 28. “We are referring your correspondence to the FBI’s inspection division for whatever action it deems appropriate."

    In this Skype interview with msnbc.com reporter Kari Huus, Yonus Fikre describes the mental abuses and lack of medical attention he says he experienced while detained for over three months in Dubai.  He spoke from Stockholm, Sweden, where he has applied for political asylum.

    Security experts say the intent of the no-fly list is quite limited — to protect U.S. aviation from attack.

    "Its principal purpose is to keep certain people who have been identified off of U.S. airlines. …  It doesn’t involve arresting people," said Brian Michael Jenkins, senior adviser to the president of the Rand Corp., a security think tank, and former member of the White House commission on aviation safety and security. "It is not a fugitive list."

    He said it would not be surprising if law enforcers used getting off the no-fly list as an inducement for recruiting informants, but it would be considered an abuse if they were included on the list in order to pressure them.

    The FBI office in Portland said it could not discuss specifics of the case, due to protections provided to Americans by the U.S. Privacy Act.

    "I can tell you that the FBI trains its agents very specifically and very thoroughly about what is acceptable under U.S. law," said Beth Anne Steele, spokeswoman for the FBI Portland field office. "To do anything counter to that training is counterproductive — we risk legal liability and potentially losing a criminal case in court."

    The problem for Fikre and others is that there is no way to dispute the information that put them on the list in the first place.

    Nelson says Fikre’s ordeal fits a pattern among Muslim Americans, including several clients, who discover they are on the no-fly list while they are out of the United States — and are then  asked to submit to questioning, with no access to legal counsel, in return for their travel rights.

    Related reporting from msnbc.com

    • No-fly Americans split up for return home
    • Bittersweet homecoming for American caught in no-fly limbo
    • No-fly Muslim takes case to court of public opinion

    Far-flung FBI encounter
    In April 2010 Fikre was in Sudan, where he arrived several months earlier to set up a trading company. He was summoned to the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum, he says, ostensibly to attend a luncheon with other Americans to be briefed on security amid election-related turmoil in the country. But when he arrived Fikre was instead met with a grilling by two men who identified themselves as FBI agents from Portland, according to his account.

    In a session lasting three to four hours, Fikre says, the two men questioned him about people and activities at As-Saber Mosque,  where he prays back in Portland. They asked about the imam and people who attend the mosque, the content of sermons and meetings and even details about the layout of the building.

    Fikre says they made it clear that they wanted him to go back to Portland as an FBI informant in an unspecified investigation.

    Fikre says  that when he told the men he didn’t want to work for the FBI, they countered by asking, "Don't you love your family? Don't you want to make real money?"  They also indicated that if he worked for them, they could help him get off of the "no fly" list — which he says was a surprise because this meeting was the first he had heard that his name was on the no-fly list.

    The details of this conversation could not be verified. However, Fikre has an email that he says came from one of the men, David Noordeloos, after Fikre refused a second meeting: "Thanks for meeting with us last week in Sudan,” it says. “While we hope to get your side of issues we keep hearing about, the choice is yours to make. The time to help yourself is now." Fikre said he considered this communication a threat.

    Fikre says he chose Sudan as a business destination because his family had lived there when he was a child, after fleeing civil war in Eritrea. In 1991 his immediate family immigrated to the United States and later became citizens, but he still has relatives in Sudan. He says the agents told him couldn’t do business in Sudan due to U.S. sanctions, so he made his way to the United Arab Emirates, where he had a friend, and started over.

    Lost to the world
    But on June 1, 2011, in Abu Dhabi, Fikre was arrested by non-uniformed secret police, blindfolded and taken to a secret state security prison with no explanation, according to Fikre’s account.

    Day after day under detention in the UAE city, he said, he was interrogated about events and people in Portland, especially those in the As-Saber mosque and its imam — answering many of the very same questions posed by the FBI agents a year earlier, he says, but in even greater detail.

    He says  that in a particularly brutal session, the prison interrogators prodded him to talk about a new case that was unfolding in Portland — that of Mohamed Osman Mohamud, 19, who had been arrested in late 2010 by the Portland FBI in a sting operation for an attempted bombing at a crowded Christmas tree lighting ceremony.  

    Fikre  says he told his questioners he didn’t know Mohamud but recognized the younger man in news reports as a member of As-Saber Mosque. He says he knew nothing of Mohamud’s ideology or plans.

    For about 10 weeks, Fikre says, he felt he was lost to the world.

    He was in held in solitary confinement in a frigid cell without bedding, he says, subjected to bright lights, stress positions, sleep deprivation and beatings around his head, chest, soles of his feet and hands, and threatened with strangulation.

    Fikre's captors urged him to work for the FBI and told him that if he agreed to do so he would be freed, according to his account. When Fikre suggested that the UAE interrogators were working for the FBI, they beat him more severely, he says.

    Consular visit
    Three weeks after Fikre went missing, Nelson, the Portland attorney, launched a search on behalf of worried relatives, contacting officials in the UAE and the U.S. State Department. On July 27, the U.S. Embassy located Fikre and said he was being detained by the UAE State Security Department, email records show.

    The next day, a U.S. Embassy staffer was allowed to meet with Fikre.

    But Fikre says that the UAE prison officials who also attended the meeting had warned him in advance not to discuss his poor treatment or face further punishment. They also promised that if he cooperated, he would be released within days.

    During the meeting Fikre says he tried to subtly signal that he was in trouble, according to his account. But he says the U.S. representative, a woman named Marwa, did not appear to pick up on those signals.

    "Mr. Fikre was reported to be in good spirits and did not report any issues of maltreatment," according to an email message from a communications officer at the U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi to the office of Rep. Earl Blumenauer, an Oregon congressman who had aided Nelson’s inquiries about the case.  The message, obtained by msnbc.com noted that the embassy understood Fikre was not charged with any crime and should be released soon.

    Fikre’s incarceration, questioning and abuse continued for nearly seven weeks after that meeting, he says. There were no more visits from the consulate.

    He was finally released on Sept. 14, and — because he could not board a flight to the United States – he went to Sweden, where he is staying with a relative while Swedish officials review his request  for asylum.

    "I used to take great pride in being an American," Fikre said. "I believed that I have a very powerful country that will take care of me no matter where I am. … (Now) I feel like a second-class citizen or not even a citizen. I didn’t get any help from my government."

    Fikre and Nelson say they believe the Sudan meeting and the detention were arranged by the FBI to bolster its investigation and prosecution of Mohamud, the would-be Christmas tree bomber.

    How names get put on the no-fly list

    The FBI had been tracking Mohamud since he was about 16, because of email communications that officials say expressed his desire to pursue violent jihad, according to an affidavit for his arrest.

    Sting operation
    An undercover FBI agent first made contact with Mohamud in June 2010 in the sting operation that led to his arrest in November.

    On Nov. 26, 2010, apparently believing he had connected with Islamic extremists, Mohamud allegedly drove a car he believed contained explosives to a Christmas tree lighting ceremony in Portland and then attempted to detonate it with a cellphone. The explosives and the detonator were fakes supplied by the FBI, which then swept in and arrested him.

    Mohamud's trial, scheduled to begin in October, is expected to be a battle over entrapment — whether the sting operation averted a deadly attack or provoked action on the part of a disillusioned young man.

    Fikre is one of several Portland Muslims —all of whom sometimes pray at As-Saber Mosque –  stranded overseas in recent months by the no-fly list. Jamal Tarhuni, 55, and Mustafa Elogbi, 60, both longtime U.S. citizens, were able to return home from trips to Libya only with the intervention of lawyers. They too say they were pursued by Portland FBI agents for questioning while in North Africa.

    The men were reunited with their families in Portland but remain on the no-fly list. In Tarhuni’s case, the designation means he cannot complete aid projects he was working on in Libya with the nonprofit Medical Teams International, and he takes trains to meetings across the country.

    Video: Waiting for husband to come home

    These men, and others named on the no-fly list must be "considered a threat to aircraft, or be operationally capable of carrying out a terrorist attack, and using air travel to get somewhere for the purpose of conducting a terrorist attack, or be a threat to U.S. installations or troops worldwide," said the spokesman for the Terrorist Screening Center.

    Tarhuni, Elogbi and Fikre are likely to file a lawsuit against the Department of Justice to challenge that claim and recover their travel rights, said Nelson.

    But Fikre, unlike the other two, is not eager to return to the United States. He said that whatever action he takes will be from the relative security of Sweden, which he hopes will grant him a permanent haven.

    "The most important thing for me is to find out why they did to me what they did, Fikri said, speaking from a relative’s home in Sweden. “It’s always in the back of your mind, you know, you wonder why this happened to me.  And if you get the answer to that question, you could move on, you know.  But something like this happened to you, you always are going to wonder — I wonder why this happened and who was really involved, who was really running the show behind the scenes."

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    928 comments

    So the f*cking terrorists have won. As a nation we are now so fearful of what might happen if a Muslim goes to Africa or the Middle East that we are going to treat them ALL like terrorists. We'll stop them from pursuing entrepreneurial and philanthropic activities so that more people can suffer. We' …

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    Explore related topics: muslim, security, terrorism, sudan, jihad, no-fly-list, uae, featured, kari-huus
  • 29
    Feb
    2012
    9:17pm, EST

    US Muslim aid worker is home -- but no-fly list grounds him again

    Jamal Tarhuni looks over his U.S. passport with his son Rasheed at his home in Portland, Oregon, after returning a month late from a trip to Libya. Tarhuni was denied boarding a U.S. bound flight and summoned for extensive questioning by the FBI.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    After the FBI mysteriously interrogated U.S. citizen Jamal Tarhuni in Tunisia and delayed his flight home to Portland by a month, he finally was allowed to return to his family on Feb. 14, as msnbc.com reported. Tarhuni says he still does not know why he was stopped and could not get the FBI to confirm or deny whether he was on the secret no-fly list.


    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    On Wednesday, the mystery was solved, partially. When Tarhuni, 55, attempted to fly from Portland to Seattle to deliver a presentation about his experience providing humanitarian aid in Libya, he was denied boarding.


    His story is familiar to people on the FBI’s secret no-fly list. Tarhuni went to a kiosk at Portland International Airport for automated check in. The machine produced a message saying it could not process his request and instructing him to talk to a customer service representative.

    The customer service representative at Alaska Airlines took his driver’s license, then disappeared into another room, he said.

    "After about half an hour I was told that for security reasons I would not be able to fly today," said Tarhuni, who was driving to Seattle, about 175 road miles from Portland.

    He asked the manager at the airline to contact a representative with the Transportation Security Administration. But after a 10-minute cell phone call, the airline manager said there was no one to resolve the problem.

    The no-fly list is maintained by the Terrorism Screening Center, administered by the FBI. According to the FBI web site, the list contains the names of "known and appropriately suspected terrorists." The list has about 20,000 names on it, according to the TSC, including about 500 U.S. citizens. FBI policy prohibits confirming or denying an individual is on the list.

    "In practical terms, I have to drive in the snow and rain to Seattle because I made a commitment to the World Affairs Council to give a presentation," Tarhuni said.

    Related content:

    • American aid worker: U.S. bars my return
    • What gives? Another American caught in no-fly limbo
    • No-fly Americans split up to fly home

    He was scheduled to speak Wednesday evening at a World Affairs Council event on his experience working with Medical Teams International on humanitarian projects in Libya -- which is where he was before his encounter with the FBI in Tunisia.

    "Personally I am extremely disappointed, and I am at a loss for what I need to do, and whether justice will be served," said Tarhuni, who was born in Libya but has lived in the United States for more than three decades.

    Tarhuni says he will pursue a legal case if necessary to force the government to restore his right to fly. Among other things, he was planning to facilitate teams of American doctors and nurses who will provide training in Libya, which is trying to recover from a civil war and set up a new government after the ouster of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in December.

    In the meantime, Tarhuni was preparing to board a train as early as Thursday in Portland to get to a meeting in Minnesota on March 3, where he and a Medical Teams International representative are slated to speak to a Nobel Prize forum.

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    115 comments

    So the Terrorist won. We as a nation have become what we most aspired not to be, a Fascist state.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: islam, no-fly-list, muslim-american, kari-huus, jamal-tarhuni, tarhuni
  • 21
    Feb
    2012
    7:00pm, EST

    'No-fly' Muslim takes case to court of public opinion

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Mustafa Elogbi and his lawyer address media and supporters at Portland International Airport on Monday. six weeks after he was stranded abroad by opaque U.S. security procedures.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    PORTLAND, Ore. — Mustafa Elogbi is by nature a private person. But when he finally arrived home after a frightening ordeal with U.S. security officials that cost him six weeks and thousands of dollars, he chose the spotlight.

    Elogbi is seeking publicity and threatening legal action against the government for what he says was virtual exile by the U.S. government despite concerns about how the publicity might affect his family.

    "I worry about my kids -- there are a lot of good people, but there are some who could try to harm them," the 60-year-old Libyan-American said Monday after clearing Customs at Portland International Airport. "But I think we really didn’t have any other choice."


    On Jan. 4, after visiting family and friends in Libya, Elogbi headed home from Tunis, Tunisia, to the United States, where he is a citizen and resident of 33 years. But when his flight landed at London’s Heathrow Airport, he was detained and questioned by security officials who he says told him they were acting on behalf of Washington.

    They told him he would not be able to board a flight to the United States, and instead locked him up in solitary confinement at a British detention center for two days, then placed him on a flight back to Tunis.

    Elogbi was shaken and humiliated. His wife, Annie Petrossian, contacted a Portland lawyer immediately, but Elogbi was at first leery of confronting the government.

    But his options were limited. Because he was apparently on the U.S. secret "no-fly" list, he could not board any flight to the United States or Canada, which also enforces the list.

    The Terrorism Screening Center, operated by the FBI, as a matter of policy, will not confirm nor deny the inclusion of a given person on the no-fly list. About 500 U.S. citizens are on the list, said a representative at the TSC, who asked not to be named. The total number of names on the list -– which includes "known or suspected terrorists" stands at about 21,000.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Mustafa thanks Muna Qadan, 8, for the home-made greeting card she gave him as he arrived at the airport. Watching are Mustafa's daughter, Alaa, and her friend Maryam Qadan.

    The Council on American Islamic Relations says it regularly fields calls from Americans –- mostly Muslims -- who are prevented from boarding and believe they are on the no-fly list. Less than half of those who contact the organization pursue legal action, and fewer still seek publicity, according to CAIR staff attorney Gadeir Abbas. He says this is especially true if they are within the United States, and can take a car or train home.

    Previous coverage from msnbc.com

    • American aid worker: US bars my return
    • What gives? Another American caught in no-fly limbo
    • No-fly Americans split up to fly home
    • Bittersweet homecoming for Libyan-American caught in no-fly limbo

    "Part of the reason people don’t share that they are on the no fly list … (is that) being on the list could have implications for their relationships or standing in the community," said Abbas. "It is a public declaration that the government for whatever reason is suspicious of you."

    A few American citizens who have been prevented from boarding flights have made their way back to the United States by boat, train and car. And Abbas said some give up.

    "There are definitely folks who were abroad, found themselves on the no-fly list and never returned,” said Abbas. "If the U.S. is impeding your travel back to the U.S …. it’s just a small jump to speculate about what could happen to you when you return."

    But Elogbi said he never considered staying away.

    "I lived here for 33 years. Basically I’m an American guy," he said. "This is my home. They cannot chase us out of this country. It’s not going to make me run away from the United States."

    With the help of two attorneys, and his wife’s persistent calls to U.S. agencies and her senator, Elogbi ultimately was allowed to fly home. He was required to fly on a U.S. carrier, on an itinerary approved by the U.S. Embassy in Tunis, which was communicating about the case with Washington.

    He did not submit to questioning by an FBI agent who contacted him in Tunis, he said, because he wanted a lawyer present. When he did fly, he did so with his Portland lawyer, Tom Nelson, who had escorted another client, Jamal Tarhuni, back from Tunis a week earlier.

    Upon arrival, Elogbi was taken aside at U.S. Customs for questioning – and Nelson was not allowed to be present, the two said. Border authorities confiscated Elogbi’s cell phone and told him to retrieve it later this week at the Portland FBI field office.

    The FBI and the State Department have repeatedly declined to comment on the cases, citing privacy concerns.

    There are currently two major legal challenges to the Justice Department over its no-fly list.

    This could become a third, according to Nelson, who has at least one more no-fly client overseas. He has also been seeking assistance from Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who is the chair of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee, and the press.

    "I want to put a spotlight on these people (in the security apparatus," said Nelson. "They want to put a spotlight on me or on us  -- that’s fine. Bring it on. But let’s play by the rules here, let’s play by the Constitution that they are sworn to uphold."

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    381 comments

    Only one thing aptly describes this incident: Sheer lunacy.

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    Explore related topics: muslim, portland, no-fly-list, featured, kari-huus, mustafa-elogbi
  • 15
    Feb
    2012
    4:00pm, EST

    After no-fly ordeal, Libyan-American ponders unanswered questions

    Libyan-American businessman Jamal Tarhuni, who lives in Oregon, and his family talk about waiting a month for him to come home after he was turned away from his return flight from Libya and questioned by the FBI.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    Jamal Tarhuni is now home, but the questions surrounding his unexplained month-long exile in North Africa remain unanswered. 

    Tarhuni, a 55-year-old Libyan-American businessman, was reunited with his wife and four children in Portland, Ore., on Tuesday, ending an ordeal in which he was barred by the U.S. from flying home and questioned at length by the FBI. 

    It is unclear why the agency waylaid Tarhuni, and it is unclear whether he faces more scrutiny. He and his attorney presume he is on the U.S. government’s “no-fly” list — meaning he would be barred from boarding any domestic or international flight that enters U.S. airspace. The FBI and State Department have refused comment on his case, citing privacy and security, and both agencies consistently decline to confirm or deny whether specific names are on the list.


    The ordeal faced by Tarhuni and his fellow Oregonian Libyan-American, Mustafa Elogbi, 60, who remains stuck in Tunisia for another week at least, is more common for U.S. citizens than it seems — particularly for those who are Muslim or of Arab descent, said Gadeir Abbas, an attorney with the Council on American Islamic Relations who has been involved in Tarhuni’s case and many other apparent “no-fly” cases.

    Previous coverage from msnbc.com

    • American aid worker: US bars my return
    • What gives? Another American caught in no-fly limbo
    • No-fly Americans split up to fly home
    • Bittersweet homecoming for Libyan-American caught in no-fly limbo

    “There is a constant stream of despicable tales,” said Abbas. “It’s more common that we hear from people and they don’t want to go public. When your own government tells you you’re too dangerous to fly, there’s a palpable fear of retaliation. And it’s really an expectation that people on the no-fly list have that something more onerous is coming down the road.” 

    Tarhuni decided when he was stuck in Tunis that he would publicly challenge the FBI actions — which he believes were unconstitutional and unjustifiable. He said Tuesday that he intends to continue to seek publicity and generate discussion of the “no fly” issue. 

    There are two ongoing legal cases that challenge the government's authority to use the no-fly list, said Abbas. 

    "These (cases) are going to take years, and in the meantime, these are human tragedies," he added. 

    In the accompanying video, shot on Tuesday at their home in Tigard, Ore., just outside Portland, Tarhuni, his wife, Nariman Samed, and daughter Lina discuss the personal impact the incident had on the family, their uncertainty about the future and how they intend to move forward.

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    36 comments

    So apparently, the FBI now feels justified in questioning American citizens about their religious beliefs? I wonder if they do that with Christians. "Just which sect of Christianity do you belong to? Which sort of Christianity do you practice? Where do you go to church? Are you one of those "pro-lif …

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    Explore related topics: fbi, terrorism, oregon, stranded, no-fly-list, featured, tarhuni, libyan-american
  • 14
    Feb
    2012
    5:42pm, EST

    Bittersweet homecoming for Libyan-American caught in no-fly limbo

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Jamal Tarhuni hugs his wife Nariman Samed as his son Rasheed walks past at the Portland International Airport after returning from Libya.

     

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

     PORTLAND, Ore. — Family, friends and supporters celebrated the homecoming Tuesday of Jamal Tarhuni, a Libyan-American businessman whose return to the U.S. from North Africa was delayed by a month after he was detained for questioning by the FBI.

    A burst of applause and cheering went up as Tarhuni emerged into the waiting area at Portland International Airport after clearing the last bureaucratic hurdle of his trip – a two-hour wait to clear customs. His youngest son, 10-year-old Rasheed, armed with helium balloons, stood at the front of a welcome line of men.

    The tone of the homecoming quickly became serious again, as Tarhuni reassured others about the status of another member of the Libyan-American community – Mustafa Elogbi, 60, who remains in Tunisia after being barred at the last minute from joining Tarhuni and their attorney, Tom Nelson, on the flight home.


    Tarhuni, 55, left for Libya in October to deliver medical supplies to hospitals and refugee camps, but he said that when he tried to return on Jan. 17, he was denied boarding and directed to the U.S. Embassy in Tunis, where he was questioned extensively by FBI agents.

    At the Portland airport, he addressed the gathered press with a message to the FBI:

    "We value your work when you stop criminals," Tarhuni said. "We do not value your work when you do not do your homework and stop innocent people."

    He called his ordeal a shock and said he was particularly disappointed in the U.S. Embassy.

    "I was not able to get straight answers or help you would expect from your embassy abroad," he said. "I was not even able to get basic information on who made the decision to stop me from coming home."

    Tuesday’s reunion with his wife, Nariman Samed, and four children ended a month of uncertainty for Tarhuni, a naturalized American citizen, but it did nothing to clarify why he was held or whether he faces further questioning. He does not know whether he is on the government’s secret no-fly list, which would prevent him from flying back to his native Libya or in U.S. airspace.

    The uncertainty around Elogbi remains, although he has booked a flight home from Tunis on Sunday.

    American aid worker: U.S. bars my return

    What gives? Another American caught in no-fly limbo

    No-fly Americans split up to fly home

    "I’m really happy that Jamal Tarhuni is coming home, but I’m really ready for my dad to come home," said Elogbi’s daughter, Allaa, 20, fighting back tears. "(This return) does give me hope that within a week my dad will be here. … But so far you don’t know if you can trust them or not, you know? There is no reason my dad should not be home today. There is no reason he shouldn’t have been home last month."

    The crowd of about 40 people on hand to greet Tarhuni was a mixture of family and friends from Muslim and interfaith communities.

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    Karen Redington, of Beaverton, Oregon and Paul Maresh of Portland hold signs to greet Jamal Tarhuni before his arrival at the Portland International Airport. Maresh explained his motivation for coming to the airport: "I don't know this gentleman. I'm not a Muslim. I'm deeply offended by the way this man has been treated."

    "What brings me out is injustice, not allowing someone to come home because they are Muslim or have an Arabic name, or a foreign-sounding name – the nemesis du jour," said Pam Allee, a Portland resident who came to show support but does not know the families.

    Karen Redington, a Christian who said she has worked with Tarhuni on interfaith events, carried an American flag and a sign that read: "I’m sorry."

    "I am so sorry that this would happen to anyone, let alone somebody who is one of the most gentle, humble, caring men, who has taken the time to go back to his country of origin to bring millions and millions of dollars of humanitarian aid through Medical Teams International," she said. "I am so sorry. This does not represent this community; this does not represent this country."

    No one was more relieved at Tarhuni’s return than Rasheed, who was looking forward to spending some quality time with his dad after an absence of four months.

    "He missed my birthday, so he said we’re going to have a cake and we’re going to go out and we’re going to invite my friends, maybe go to Evergreen waterpark. Or we’re going to take trip to Disneyland," he said.

    Going forward, he said, he’s going to keep his eye on his dad:

    "I’m going to hug him so much and never let him go back anywhere else, and tell him, ‘If you’re going somewhere, the whole family comes with you.’"

     

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    215 comments

    The FBI should be ashamed if their ignorant incompetent selves!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: libya, muslim, terrorism, stranded, no-fly-list, featured, kari-huus, tarhuni, libyan-american
  • 13
    Feb
    2012
    4:35pm, EST

    'No-fly' Americans split up for return home

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Two American men previously barred from flights home from North Africa and subjected to extensive questioning were slated to fly back to their home in Portland, Ore. — with their attorney — on Monday, but one of them was notified over the weekend by U.S. officials that he wouldn't be allowed on the flight.

    The two Libyan-born men, both U.S. citizens and long-time businessmen in Portland, were barred from earlier efforts to return home and questioned — one by officials in the United Kingdom and the other by FBI agents in Tunis. They are believed to be on the government’s secret no-fly list, but the FBI, which maintains the list, will neither confirm nor deny names on the list as a matter of policy.

    US aid worker: US bars my return

    What gives? Another American in no-fly limbo

    After a one-month delay, Jamal Tarhuni — who had been delivering aid to Libyan medical facilities and refugee camps — was allowed to board a flight from Tunis on Monday. He was accompanied by his Portland attorney, Tom Nelson. They plan to transit through Paris and Amsterdam before flying to Portland, arriving on Tuesday morning.


    But a second Portland man caught in a parallel security quagmire, Mustafa Elogbi, was told over the weekend that he would not be able to board the flight with Tarhuni and Nelson, who is providing legal assistance to both men.

    “The U.S. government — we’re not even sure which agency — has put my family on this horrid emotional rollercoaster ride with no end in sight,” said Elogbi’s wife, Annie Petrossian, speaking from Portland. Petrossian says her husband’s high blood pressure is worsening because he has run out of medication. “Does anyone even care?”

    Elogbi’s family and attorneys said the U.S. Embassy consul in Tunis, Michael Sweeney, had previously told them to go ahead with booking the Monday flight.

    On Saturday, two days before travel, Elogbi received another missive from Sweeney saying: “The Embassy has been informed” that Elogbi must make alternative travel plans “no earlier than 24 hours after your original departure times” and according to a set of conditions that include notifying the embassy of the itinerary.

    Elogbi had been in Libya to see relatives and visit Libyan refugees in the aftermath of the revolution that ousted long-time dictator Moammar Gadhafi. He tried to return home to Portland on Jan. 8, but was detained during a layover in London--at the behest of U.S. authorities, British officials told him. Elogbi was questioned at length and held in solitary confinement for two days before being sent back to Tunis, his point of departure.

    Elogbi is now slated to fly home Feb. 19. His attorney will return to Tunis to accompany him.

    “The United States government is acting outrageously,” said Nelson, in a written message sent from Tunis. “These actions expose the government's use of the no-fly list not as a counter-terrorism tool but, rather, as a tool to coerce, intimidate, humiliate, oppress, and punish innocent members of the Muslim community in Portland.”

    The FBI office in Portland, which has an agent involved in this case, could not respond to reporter queries about the case -- whether there is a case against the men, whether there would be questioning after they returned, and whether they are on the no-fly list going forward.

    "The U.S. Privacy Act, as well as a variety of other federal laws and guidelines, prevent the FBI from speaking directly to your questions," wrote Beth Ann Steele, media relations spokewoman at the field office. "We are not allowed to speak to whether we have an investigation open in any particular instance, nor are we permitted to speak about any particular person. These protections are in place to ensure that every American’s rights to privacy are guarded."

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    70 comments

    Unrestricted power in the hands of imbeciles. Just about sums up what has happened since the Department of Homeland Security was founded.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: libya, american-muslim, islam, no-fly-list, featured, kari-huus, gadhaffi, elogbi, tarhuni
  • 3
    Feb
    2012
    1:42pm, EST

    American aid worker in Libya: US bars my return

    Lina Tarhuni

    Jamal Tarhuni from Portland, Ore. is photographed with a Libyan boy injured during the fighting in March. The boy was being treated at a hospital in Tataouine, Tunisia, where many Libyans took refuge from the war.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Updated at 6 p.m. ET: The Federal Bureau of Investigations returned calls to msnbc.com after we published our story about Jamal Tarhuni, an American citizen who was barred from flying back to the United States on Jan. 17 at the end of an aid mission to Libya.

    “At this point we have no comment,” said Beth Ann Steele, with media relations at the FBI office in Portland, which dispatched an agent to Tarhuni’s questioning at the U.S. Embassy in Tunis.

    An FBI counterterrorism official in Washington who asked not to be named confirmed that the government does not disclose the no-fly list.


    “There are legitimate security reasons for the government’s policy not to disclose who is on the no-fly list,” which is maintained by the Terrorist Screening Center. The official said: “Terrorists could change their identities or use individuals who are unknown to the U.S. intelligence community to carry out terror attacks.”

    Questions about Tarhuni’s allegation that an FBI agent had attempted to get him to sign a waiver of his Miranda rights were referred to a different part of the FBI. 

    The nonprofit civil rights organization Council on American Islamic Relations called on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to intervene in Tarhuni’s case.

    “Whatever questions American officials have for Mr. Tarhuni, no one should be barred from his or her country of citizenship without so much as a court hearing. It is immoral and unlawful for the United States to separate an American citizen from his children, his family and his country,” CAIR said in a letter to Clinton on Friday.

    “This incident raises broader concerns that the anti-Muslim training given to FBI agents and other law enforcement personnel in recent years is having an effect on the actions agents are taking in the field. It is counterproductive and unconstitutional for FBI agents to equate belief in Islam with a propensity to commit acts of violence -- as they seem to have done with Mr. Tarhuni."

    Original post: The ouster of Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi was life-changing for Jamal Tarhuni, an American citizen from the North African country who was granted U.S. asylum in the 1970s. Over the past year as Libyans fought to destroy the vestiges of the four-decade long dictatorship, Tarhuni threw himself into aid work for his native country.

    Now the Portland businessman is fighting for his right to fly home to the United States. Sometime during his most recent aid mission to Libya, it appears, Tarhuni landed on the government's no-fly list — a secret roster of thousands of people, including hundreds of Americans, whom the Department of Homeland Security has identified as terror suspects.

    "(The United States) is a country that has given me a lot," Tarhuni said, speaking to msnbc.com from Tripoli. "All of the sudden this country I love very much has given me a slap in the face … Here we are, we just got rid of this regime (Gadhafi)… and this happens to me in the United States of America. It was really mind-boggling."

    Tarhuni, 55, a naturalized U.S. citizen educated as an engineer, was preparing to return home on Jan. 17 when the run-in occurred. He had been working in Libya since October — overseeing delivery of medical supplies and food to hospitals and Libyan refugees — and was eager to get back to his wife and three children in their home in Portland, Ore. The trip had been drawn out, he said, because the aid shipments were delayed by snags at the port and at the border with Libya, which had been closed periodically.

    "Based on our experience with (Tarhuni), we believe there must be some misunderstanding," said Bill Essig, the vice president of Medical Teams International, the Portland-based Christian nonprofit for which Tarhuni was working in Libya. He confirmed that this was the third Libya mission Tarhuni had worked on with Medical Teams International in the last year.

    Questioned about religion
    Tarhuni flew from Tripoli to Tunis, but was halted by ticket agents before he could board his flight to the United States. Air France staff had received a directive by email from their Paris headquarters, they said. The mail said to instruct Tarhuni to check in as soon as possible at the U.S. Embassy in Tunis.

    At the embassy, an official looked into his case, and told Tarhuni that an unspecified federal agency wanted to interview him.

    The official, Mike Sweeney, consul at the embassy, returned a call to msnbc.com to say that he could not discuss the case because of "Privacy Act concerns ... I do not have any Privacy Act waiver to give you any information about (the) case, so unfortunately I cannot give you any information."

    So on Jan. 23, according to Tarhuni, he returned for his meeting — held in a bare vault-like room with two FBI agents, one called "Horse" who was said to be from the regional office and another agent, Brian Zinn, from Portland, Ore., and an English-speaking Libyan attorney.

    Feds' secret no-fly list more than doubles in a year

    After initial questioning about the scope and nature of Tarhuni’s work they began to move into uncomfortable territory, according to Tarhuni’s daughter, Lina, 23, who spoke to msnbc.com from Portland.

    "The FBI officials went on questioning my father about religion,” she wrote, in a detailed account provided to msnbc.com. "They asked him where he practiced his religion (place of worship)? Was he a Salafi (a sect of Islam)? Did he interact or communicate with Salafis? Did he interact with mujahideen? Did he practice Shariah law?"

    How suspects reach the no-fly list

    The question about Shariah law was especially tricky. To Tarhuni, an observant Muslim, Shariah means a set of rules for praying, marrying, parenting and generally conducting a good life, which would be a subject for discussion at any mosque, but not — as some people interpret it — as a set of rigid and punitive rules that Muslims are obliged to impose on others.

    Tarhuni said he was cooperative, even though he thought the questions seemed designed to intimidate him or suggest he had some connection with terrorists simply because of his faith.

    He even agreed to take a lie-detector test, which was presented as the final step before he was allowed to fly home.  

    Muslims often put on no-fly list without explanation

    But Tarhuni said that when a third agent, a woman from New York, requested that he sign a document — which turned out to be a waiver of his Miranda rights — he balked.

    "When my dad read the paper he realized it was a document to waive his constitutional right, his Miranda rights … he immediately stood up, unhooked the cords attached to him, and claimed he was not going to take the lie detector test and was not going to waive his rights," his daughter said.

    Multiple calls to the FBI media section and terrorism screening center that keeps the no-fly list, have have not yet yielded any information about the Tarhuni case.

    Boats, trains and cars?
    To the extent that he and his lawyers can guess, they believe Tarhuni’s name is on a secret no-fly list administered by the Department of Homeland Security.

    Though no one will say if his name is on the list, Tarhuni said he was told by U.S. embassy officials that he can fly home after filing a request in the electronic TRIP system — or Traveler Redress Inquiry Program.

    Jamal Tarhuni

    Humanitarian volunteer Jamal Tarhuni pictured with his family in Portland, Ore. From left, Lina (22), Nizar (21), Jamal and his wife Nariman Samed, son Rasheed (10) and daughter Lena (15).

    According to its website, the TRIP system is designed for people "who have been denied or delayed airline boarding; have been denied or delayed entry into or exit from the U.S. at a port of entry or border crossing; or have been repeatedly referred to additional (secondary) screening can file an inquiry to seek redress."

    However, Portland attorney Tom Nelson, who is advising Tarhuni and has two other clients on the no-fly list, advises against filing in the TRIP system.

    "Once you trigger the TRIP process, you affect your legal rights to challenge the actions of the FBI in court," said Nelson.

    Alternatively, Tarhuni has been informed that he can make the 5,000-mile return trip by other means of transportation — boats, trains, cars.

    He is scheduled to fly out of Tunis, accompanied by Nelson, on Feb. 13. He is not planning to file for a redress number through the TRIP system.

    "I don’t know what the FBI reaction will be,” said Tarhuni. "They could try to detain me or arrest me at the airport. I am ready for them. I have a constitutional right that I will protect and demand … The FBI was absolutely wrong, and they caused a lot of pain and inconvenience to me and my family."

    Msnbc.com is pursuing more information from the the FBI and the State Department, as well as from members of Jamal Tarhuni’s Portland community. We will be updating his story as information emerges.

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    333 comments

    It's difficult to determine why he is on that list. I just think that people, for whatever reason, should be aware that travel to these countries will raise flags. Right or wrong that is the real world. I wish him well but these times call for prudence.

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    Explore related topics: fbi, libya, muslim, tunisia, islam, no-fly-list, featured, kari-huus

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Kari Huus

Reporter Kari Huus joined msnbc.com at launch in 1996 after 7 years reporting from China. In recent years, she has focused on domestic issues, playing a key role in msnbc.com series including The Elkhart Project, Gut Check America, and Rising from Ruin--on the recovery of two Mississippi towns after Hurricane Katrina. Huus has also covered a wide array of international stories, including China's 2008 earthquake, the Asian economic crisis, the fal …

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