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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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2 November 2009 By Stephen Lendman
On October 28, New York Times writer Nick Bunkley
wrote the following:
"Federal agents (today) fatally
shot a man they described as the leader of a violent
Sunni Muslim separatist group in Detroit." Targeted
was Luqman Ameen Abdullah "whom agents were trying to
arrest in Dearborn on charges that included illegal
possession and sale of firearms and conspiracy to sell
stolen goods."
The Times echoed FBI allegations
that Abdullah "began firing at them from a warehouse
(and) was shot in the return fire...." Ones also that
he said:
-- "America must fall;"
-- if police tried to arrest him
he'd "strap a bomb on and blow up everybody;" and
-- that he urged his followers to
get bulletproof vests by "shoot(ing) a cop in the head
and tak(ing) their vest."
In fact, neither happened, and no
surprise. No bombs were found or went off, and
bulletproof vests are easily bought online from web
sites like bulletproofme.com, so why shoot anyone to
get them.
Post-9/11, America declared war
on Islam with the FBI in the lead at home. It
notoriously targets the vulnerable, entraps them with
paid informants, inflates bogus charges, spreads them
maliciously through the media, then intimidates juries
to convict and sentence innocent men and some women to
long prison terms. Justice is nearly always denied. At
times willful killings are committed. The Detroit
Muslims are their latest victims.
The Muslim Community Reacts
The Muslim Public Affairs Council
(MPAC) "is a public service agency working for the
civil rights of American Muslims, for the integration
of Islam into American pluralism, and for a positive,
constructive relationship between American Muslims and
their representatives." Since its 1988 founding, it's
become known for promoting "Mercy, Justice, Peace,
Human Dignity, Freedom, and Equality for all."
On October 29, MPAC's Executive
Director, Salam Al-Marayati said:
"There is a clear and present
danger in the escalating mob mentality against
vulnerable Muslim Americans."
The organization called for an
investigation into the shooting death, saying it is
"deeply disturbed" by the incident.
So is the Muslim Alliance in
North America (MANA), a national network of masjids
(mosques), Muslim organizations and individuals
committed to addressing the needs of the Muslim
community. It released a statement saying:
"It is with deep sadness and
concern that we announce the shooting death of Imam
Luqman A. Abdullah, of Masjid Al-Haqq (Detroit, MI).
Imam Luqman was a representative of the Detroit Muslim
community to the 'National Ummah' and the general
assembly (Shura) of the Muslim Alliance in North
America (MANA)...."
Ummah founder Jamil Al-Amin (aka
H. Rap Brown) wanted it to be an association of
mosques in US cities to coordinate religious and
social services primarily in the black community.
Calling it a "nationwide radical fundamentalist Sunni
group consisting primarily of African-Americans" is an
"offensive mischaracterization."
Those who've worked with Imam
Abdullah know him for having "advocated for the
downtrodden and always sp(eaking) about the importance
of connecting to the needs of the poor." Alleging that
he and his followers engaged in illegal activity,
resisted arrest, and waged an "offensive jihad against
the American government" are "shocking and
inconsistent."
On October 30, the American
Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and Elections (AMT),
a coalition of major national Islamic organizations,
issued this statement:
"It is imperative that an
independent investigation of Imam Luqman Ameen
Abdullah's death make public the exact circumstances
in which he died. And unless the FBI has evidence
linking the criminal allegations to the religious
affiliation of the suspects, we ask that federal
authorities stop injecting religion into this case.
The unjustified linkage of this case to the faith
Islam will only serve to promote an increase in
existing anti-Muslim stereotyping and bias in our
society."
AMT also urged the Congressional
Tri-Causus (African-American, Latino and Asian) to
call for a judicial inquiry.
A statement from The
International Council for Urban (Formations) Peace,
Justice and Empowerment read:
We members "are appalled by the
raids on Masjid Al-Haqq and a halal meat packing plant
that left (Abdullah) dead. We are demanding an
independent investigation into this action that is
clearly the result of a climate of Islamophobia fed by
law enforcement and a media bent on sensationalism.
(The FBI's) complaint and the resulting raid are
nothing more than government sponsored terrorism
against a group that was working to help the
community...."
"The inconsistencies in this
investigation are glaring. The case is based on sworn
statements of informants. These informants were
convicted criminals who were paid by the federal
government for their 'work.' These criminals were used
to engage and entrap law abiding citizens...."
We "never heard Imam Abdullah
make any statements (or suggest any actions)
consistent with the statements in the complaint...."
"The FBI has stated that this was
not a terrorism case. However, the investigation was
conducted by a counter terrorism unit."
"....Masjid Al-Haqq, under the
direction of Imam Abdullah, fed the hungry, housed the
homeless, worked with gangs and the formerly
incarcerated to turn a crime ridden and drug infested
neighborhood around to becoming a productive
community....The most disturbing fact is that a
religious leader who reached out to his people and his
community is dead, the victim of a society that sees
anyone who is different as dangerous."
Omar Regan, Abdullah's son, led
the Friday, October 30 prayers at the Al-Haqq mosque,
and said the following:
"My father was a sharp-tongued
individual. He would talk about his dislike of the
government, about how law enforcement wasn't
protecting and serving the people. But speaking his
emotions and acting on (them) are two different
things."
Other community members echoed
that sentiment in accusing the FBI of heavy-handed
tactics that killed Abdullah maliciously from multiple
gunshot wounds.
Abdullah El-Amin, an imam at
Detroit's Muslim Center (the city's largest black
mosque), said he knew Luqman for years and never heard
him talk about wanting a separate Muslim state, just
something "like the Pennsylvania Dutch have (with)
their own communities and stuff."
He and about 20 other Detroit
imams attended an October 29 meeting with US Attorney
Terrence Berg and FBI Special Agent Andrew Arena at
which they charged the Agency with entrapping
Abdullah, then killing him in cold blood. One
informant, they said, was a former Abdullah follower
with a criminal past, and he and the others "came to a
place where people are not getting social security,
unemployment. They had nothing," so could easily be
manipulated to sell stolen items they provided.
Dawud Walid, Executive Director
of the Michigan chapter of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) said:
"The very incendiary rhetoric
that the FBI alleges, I never heard that from
(Abdullah). There was nothing extraordinary about
him....I knew him as a respected imam in the Muslim
community....I knew him to be charitable. He would
open up the mosque to homeless people. He used to run
a soup kitchen and feed indigent people....I knew
nothing of him that was related to any nefarious or
criminal behavior."
Walid added:
"Is this the kind of excessive
force that we black Americans are all too familiar
with?" He also questioned using informants he called
"agent provocateurs" who entice law-abiding people to
self-incriminate.
Other community members believe
Abdullah was maliciously targeted, that the FBI likely
initiated gunfire, and if he shot back it was in
self-defense.
Even the FBI's complaint admitted
that whatever alleged crimes were planned or
committed, they were minor and inconsequential. Hardly
offenses warranting a high-profile raid, shoot-out,
and political assassination.
Department of Justices
Allegations
On October 28, a Department of
Justice (DOJ) press release headlined: "Eleven
Members/Associates of Ummah Charged with Federal
Violations - One Subject Fatally Shot During Arrest."
The FBI and US Attorney for the Eastern District of
Michigan, Terrence Berg, charged:
"Luqman Ameen Abdullah, aka
Christopher Thomas, and 10 others with conspiracy to
commit several federal crimes, including theft from
interstate shipments, mail fraud to obtain the
proceeds of arson, illegal possession and sale of
firearms, and tampering with motor vehicle
identification numbers. The eleven defendants are
members of a group that is alleged to have engaged in
violent activity over a period of many years, and
known to be armed."
Those charged were "believed to
be armed and dangerous (so) special safeguards were
employed by law enforcement to secure the arrests
without confrontation. During the arrests today, the
suspects were ordered to surrender. At one location,
four (did) and were arrested without incident. Luqman
Ameen Abdullah did not surrender and fired his weapon.
An exchange of gun fire followed and Abdullah was
killed."
"Abdullah was the leader of part
of a group which calls themselves Ummah ('the
brotherhood'), a group of mostly African-American
converts to Islam, which seeks to establish a separate
Sharia-law governed state within the United States.
The Ummah is ruled by Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, formerly
known as H. Rap Brown, who is serving a (life)
sentence (without parole) in USP Florence, CO, ADMAX (supermax),
for the murder of two police officers in Georgia."
In the US District Court for the
Eastern District of Michigan, a criminal complaint
named:
-- Luqman Ameen Abdullah (aka
Christopher Thomas);
-- Mohammad Abdul Bassir (aka
Franklin D. Roosevelt Williams);
-- Muhammad Abdul Salaam (aka
Muhammad Addul Salam; aka Gregory Stone; aka Gun Man;
aka Norman Shields);
-- Abdul Saboor (aka Swayne
Edward Davis);
-- Muhahid Carswell (aka Muhahid
Abdullah, Luqman's son);
-- Abdullah Beard (aka Detric
Lamont Driver);
-- Mohammad Philistine (aka
Mohammad Palestine; aka Mohammad Al-Sahli);
-- Yassir Ali Khan;
-- Adam Hussain Ibraheem;
-- Garry Laverne Porter (aka
Mujahid); and
-- Ali Abdul Raqib.
At the time of the raid, three of
the men were still at large - Mujahid Carswell
(Abdullah's son), Mohammad Philistine and Yassir Ali
Khan. However, Windsor, Ontario police announced the
arrest of Carswell the next day, and on October 31,
they arrested Philistine and Ali Khan.
The unsealed complaint charged
Abdullah with "espous(ing) the use of violence against
law enforcement, (and) train(ing) members of his group
in the use of firearms and martial arts in
anticipation of some type of action against the
government." It said "Abdullah and other members of
this group were known to carry firearms and other
weapons."
According to FBI
Counter-Terrorism Squad Special Agent Gary Leone, a
"confidential source" (aka paid informant) called S-2
provided "reliable and credible" information,
"independently corroborated by other sources, and by
consensual recordings he has made with the members of
The Ummah at the direction of the FBI."
In a "surreptitiously" recorded
December 12, 2007 conversation, "S-2 told Abdullah he
had asked to donate $5,000 to pay to have someone 'do
something' during the 2006 Super Bowl in Detroit.
Abdullah said he would not be involved in injuring
innocent people for no reason: 'If there's something
to be done....it (has) to be legitimate.' "
He then allegedly said...."things
are coming....I got some violence (in me) because of
what they did to Imam Jamil (H. Rap Brown)....I got
some stuff, man, I got some soldiers with
me....Brothers that I know would, you know, if I say
'Let's go, we going to go and do something,' they
would do it."
Leone said this and other
recordings "confirm(ed) by (another paid informant)
S-1 (showed) that Abdullah and his followers view
themselves as soldiers at war against the United
States government, and against non-Muslims," yet
nothing in his above statement says that, so charges
amount to putting FBI allegations in the mind of a
dead man, unable to refute them.
The DOJ presented no evidence of
a plot, a crime, or intent to commit one.
The FBI used three paid
informants for over two years. On October 10, 2008,
the third, S-3, allegedly recorded Abdullah saying:
"We have to cut the ties to
(Christians, Jews, and the Kuffar (infidels). You
cannot please them until you follow their religion....Obama
is a Kafir (infidel, non-Muslim, an insulting term for
any African American)....the premise of Allah and
Islam (is) 'the worst Muslim is better than the best
Kafir....we should be trying to figure out how to
fight the Kuffar....Washington is trying to stop
everything we do....they are my enemy, and I should be
trying to plot as to how to make moves to get some
things accomplished....(we) need to plan to do
something."
These and other recordings show
anger, not intent to commit crimes. Yet that's what
the DOJ alleges. Saying "We are going to have to fight
against the Kafir" suggests resistance against a
hostile state. Even stronger statements, allegedly
recorded, aren't hard evidence of planned violence
against the FBI, other federal agents, or anyone
else.
In its October 28 press release,
the DOJ acknowledged that the above criminal complaint
"is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. A
trial cannot be held on felony charges in a complaint.
When the investigation is completed a determination
will be made whether to seek a felony indictment." Yet
the FBI killed Abdullah, allegedly in a shoot-out with
only its account for proof, an Agency notorious for
political assassinations and twisting facts to make
its case.
Imam Umar Responds
In a widely distributed message,
an Imam Umar wrote:
"The FBI ups the ante. They set
up Imam Luqman of Detroit and murdered him. We know
him and the community he comes from. This is no
terrorist trap. This was part criminal sting and when
the Imam and his brothers peeped the tricks of the
FBI, they lured him to a warehouse and killed him. Now
they accuse Imam Jamil (H. Rap Brown) who has been in
prison for the past ten years as leader of this group.
He is an easy target. A lone Imam with the FBI was
also an easy target. The FBI is not only tricky and
devious....they are extremely dangerous thugs and
murderers."
A follow-up message added:
"The FBI is known for their
murderous tactics all over the world. When they are
given an assignment they use every imaginative
strategy to accomplish their goal. When they were
under J. Edgar Hoover, he found various ways to
discredit Martin Luther King....They turned the Black
Stone Rangers against the Black Panthers in Chicago
that (caused) the death of the (BPP) leaders. They got
the Huey P. Newton and Eldredge Cleaver factions to
kill one another. They have gone after the so-called
terrorists with one phony case after another. They
first went after immigrants, decimating their numbers
in America. Now they are after African American
Muslims. Next will most likely be the support groups
of mostly white people....These FBI devils are very
shrewd and their evil spreads....The murder of a good
Muslim will only make it more dangerous to live in
America. They know that black people sooner or later
will fight back."
"The Ummah is not a
'brotherhood,' it is the Arabic word for 'community.'
This group setting up a Muslim state? What a joke.
They can hardly set up an annual conference. This
information is to cause fear....to cause backlash
against Muslims....Let the FBI continue with their
tricks, lies and murder. Before long, everyone will
see through their veil and they will become the
target."
Imam Jamil Al-Amin, Formerly
Known as H. Rap Brown
Born Hubert Gerold Brown, he
became famously known as H. Rap Brown, a 1960s civil
rights activist, social commentator, and chairman of
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
(succeeding Stokely Carmichael) where he distinguished
himself as a charismatic leader and effective
organizer. In 1968, he was named minister of justice
for the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense that
strove for ethnic justice, racial emancipation, and
real economic, social, and political equity across
gender and color lines.
As a result, he was targeted by
federal and state authorities, charged with inciting a
riot in Maryland, violating the National Firearms Act,
and illegally crossing state lines to skip bail.
During his 1970 firearms trial, he disappeared for 17
months and was placed on the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted"
list. In late 1971, he reemerged after being arrested
and falsely charged with armed robbery in Manhattan.
Convicted, he served five years in Attica State
Prison.
While there, he converted to
Islam and changed his name to Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin.
After release, he started an Atlanta mosque and
operated a small grocery store and community center.
Then in 2000, he was charged with murdering a black
police officer and injuring his partner in a gun
battle outside his store.
In 2002, he was tried, and
despite strong evidence of his innocence, was
convicted on 13 counts, including murder, aggravated
assault, obstruction, and possession of a firearm by a
convicted felon, and sentenced to life imprisonment
with no possibility of parole.
At trial, his lawyers argued for
a case of mistaken identity, claimed prosecutors were
out to get him for decades, and presented a strong
defense in his behalf, including:
-- his fingerprints weren't on
the murder weapon;
-- he wasn't wounded in the
incident even though the arresting deputy said he shot
the assailant;
-- he also identified his eyes as
gray; Al-Amin's are brown;
-- his attire didn't match
clothing the shooter wore;
-- blood found at the scene was
discounted and unchecked;
-- potentially exculpatory
evidence relating to the sheriff's vehicle was either
lost or destroyed;
-- a man named Otis Jackson
confessed to the crime; it was ignored, never
introduced at trial, days later Jackson recanted, and
the defense team never got a chance to interview him;
and
-- withheld evidence and
proceedings were so controversial that observers
believed Brown was convicted pre-trial for his civil
rights activism and conversion to Islam; he was
clearly a targeted man;
It became clearer when the
Georgia Supreme Court agreed that the prosecution
committed a grave constitutional error when, in
closing arguments, the assistant district attorney
directed jurors to consider posed questions relating
to Al-Amin's failure to present testimony or evidence.
Nonetheless, the Court upheld the verdict.
Afterward, his legal team filed a
habeas corpus writ citing gross irregularities,
including:
-- not investigating Otis
Jackson's confession;
-- denying a change of venue due
to negative publicity;
-- prohibiting Al-Amin from
testifying in his own defense;
-- eliminating Muslims from the
jury pool;
-- dismissing three of his four
trial lawyers;
-- prohibiting potentially
exculpatory evidence from being introduced;
-- denying favorable testimony in
his behalf;
-- withholding discovery from the
defense team;
-- denying them a chance to
cross-examine an FBI agent relating to his prior
misconduct against a Muslim, his misleading and false
testimony, and charges that he tampered with evidence;
and
-- inflammatory media reports
during trial, portraying Al-Amin as a radical
extremist.
A Final Comment
As a nationally known civil
rights champion and Islamic leader, Al-Amin was a
prime FBI COINTELPRO target, the agency's infamous
counterintelligence program against political
activists, legitimate dissent, independent thought,
and non-violent opposition to the Vietnam war, and
racial and social injustice.
It continues today against men
like Abdullah, his followers, and dozens more like
them for their faith, ethnicity, race, activism,
prominence, and opposition to government injustice at
the wrong time to be Muslim in America.
According to an Islamic Human
Rights Commission (IHRC) December 2007 report on Al-Amin
titled, "Prisoners of Faith Campaign Pack," many
thousands of "Muslim prisoners of faith around the
world" are being held in Muslim and non-Muslim
countries, including politicians, human rights
activists, students, writers, and others with "one
thing in common:" their adherence "to the Islamic
belief and way of life."
They're portrayed as "terrorists,
inciters of religious hatred or of even trying to
change the constitution of the country" where they
live. They're vilified and denied their civil rights.
In custody, they're neglected, brutalized, tortured,
and forgotten as non-persons. As one of them, Al-Amin
once said:
"For more than thirty years, I
have been tormented and persecuted by my enemies for
reasons of race and belief....I seek truth over a lie;
I seek justice over injustice; I seek righteousness
over the rewards of evil doers; and I love ALLAH more
than I love the state."
For others like him, their
struggle for equity, social justice, and mutual
understanding persists against hostile government
oppression. In America as much as anywhere. Its
tradition continues.
Stephen Lendman is a Research
Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global
Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday
- Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on world and
national issues. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
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