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L.A. Times-Anger over INS Arrests
www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-detain18dec18.story
December 18, 2002
Anger Over INS Arrests
Dozens are held when they obey order for residents of Mideast nations and Sudan
to register. Many say they love the U.S., feel hurt.
By Jennifer Mena, Times Staff Writer
In peaceful Irvine, where Iranians who fled the Ayatollah Khomeini established a
tight-knit community of professionals and young families, the last thing anyone
expected was to be tossed in jail.
On Tuesday -- the day after dozens of immigrants from Middle Eastern countries
and Sudan were taken into custody during a government registration process --
residents like Ahmad Mesbah were filled with sadness and anger.
"We suffered a lot, and that is why we are here. We love the United States, so
this has been frustrating," said Mesbah, who helps lead monthly networking
meetings for Iranian professionals. "There's also something ironic about it.
This affects the cream of the crop who came here. We are scientists, doctors,
engineers."
The registration, mandated for people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria
who are in the United States on temporary visas, led to the detention on
immigration violation charges of as many as several hundred, some who had nearly
completed the process for legal residency, friends and relatives said.
The U.S. Department of Justice and the Immigration and Naturalization Service
refused to say how many people had been apprehended in California or around the
country in connection with the registration process. Santa Ana police said as
many as 40 people detained at the INS center there were booked into the city
jail Monday. Police in Los Angeles could not provide an arrest figure.
But in Westwood, Irvine and other communities with large numbers of Iranian
immigrants, and on Persian-language local media, accounts of detentions were
widespread. Local attorneys and callers to radio stations offered accounts of
relatives', some of whom had not been to their native countries since childhood,
being jailed and placed at risk of being deported.
As some scrambled to bail out jailed relatives, others sought ways to pressure
the government to change course. A lawsuit seeking an injunction to halt the
registration was filed in Santa Ana.
Persian-language radio stations buzzed with commentary. And an Iranian attorney
conducted a vigil outside the INS office in Los Angeles.
"I have seen with my own eyes at least 450 people being detained just yesterday
[at the INS office in Los Angeles]. They handcuffed them and walked them away,"
said attorney Soheila Jonoubi.
"These people came in voluntarily. They wanted to comply with the law. This is
the worst violation of human rights."
Most of those detained posted bail, but now face deportation hearings.
Under the registration program, men who are required to register are
photographed, fingerprinted and interviewed. Citizens of 13 other countries --
North Korea and 12 Middle Eastern and North African nations -- will be required
to register by Jan. 10. Men from Saudi Arabia and Pakistan who are in the United
States on temporary visas are required to register in February.
The INS said about 7,500 immigrants nationwide would be affected, but Islamic
groups said the number could be far higher.
The post-Sept. 11 procedure is designed to help the INS improve its
accountability of immigrants who lack green cards.
Some immigrants, however, said the registration will not lead to catching
terrorists.
"If they were terrorists, they would not show up to the INS for the
registration," said Babak Sotoodeh, a Santa Ana attorney who emigrated from
Iran.
"We ran away from the Ayatollah and the [radical] Islam. We are very patriotic
in the United States," Sotoodeh said. "Why are we being targeted? It's a total
irony."
Hossein Hedjazi, program manager at Persian-language radio station KIRN-AM
(670), said Irvine, Westwood and several other Southern California communities
draw Iranian professionals looking for good schools and quiet suburbs.
Irvine is home to an annual Persian festival and a Persian New Year's party in
April, both of which draw 20,000 to 30,000 people.
More than 350 Iranians in Irvine participated in an event last year that raised
$75,000 for Sept. 11 victims. A radio-thon on KIRN raised an additional
$100,000.
"We see ourselves as Americans. When something happens to America, it happens to
us," said Mariam Khosravai, an organizer of the fund-raiser who came to Irvine
from Iran in 1985. "We will do anything to cooperate with the American
government. That is why this hurts so much."
Reza Tabib was indignant that his friend Efran Haj Rasoli -- a 19-year-old
Irvine Valley College student -- was taken into custody Monday because he lacked
a residency card. Tabib said the INS wrote Rasoli a letter indicating it had
been approved in 2000 but that because of INS backlogs, it had not arrived.
"They are looking for terrorists. These people who are turning themselves in are
not terrorists," Tabib said. "This boy is going to college. He is not a threat
to society."
The Los Angeles Times
December 18, 2002
Armenian INS requirements reversed
Proposal to require nonimmigrant aliens to register with agency is eliminated a
day after being published by government.
www.latimes.com/news/local/glendale/news/la-gnp-armenian18dec18.story
By Gretchen Hoffman, News-Press
GLENDALE -- The White House on Tuesday reversed a controversial Immigration and
Naturalization Service proposal that would have required some Armenian men to
register with and report their movements to the INS, government officials said.
The proposal was published Monday in the Federal Register -- the official
publication government agencies use to record rules. It added Armenia, Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia to a list of countries whose male citizens have to register
with the INS.
It would have affected Armenian citizens older than 16 who came to the United
States on student and work visas or to travel on or before Sept. 30, 2002, and
who will remain in the country after Feb. 21, 2003. It would not have included
U.S. citizens of Armenian descent, men who have been granted asylum or legal
residents.
Countries already on the list, which targets nations with terrorist ties or
those suspected of harboring terrorists, include Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq.
Following the announcement late Friday of Armenia's addition, Armenian cable
channels implored viewers to contact the White House, asking why the country had
been added. That plea resulted in more than 1,000 phone calls, letters and
faxes. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Glendale) also questioned the proposal due to
Armenia's alliance in the war against terrorism.
Bill Grady, Schiff's chief of staff, said it was not clear whether Armenia was
included on the list in error or had been removed after people questioned its
addition.
White House officials could not be reached for comment Tuesday.
Francisco Arcaute, spokesman for the Los Angeles division of the INS, said he
had no knowledge of Armenia ever being included in the list, but confirmed it is
not on the list now.
"We were very concerned about this inclusion on the list initially, but we're
glad that there was a revision of the INS policy," said Ardashes Kassakhian,
director of government relations for the Glendale-based Armenian National
Committee Western Region. "We understand from the Bush administration and the
Department of Justice that there was a mistake made.
"We know that there are a lot of Armenian nationals that may have been affected
by this," he added. "Our concern was as much for their welfare as it was for the
perception that Armenia was going to have by being added to this list."
Kassakhian pointed to Armenia's history of support for the war on terrorism,
including the country's swift move in granting overflight rights to U.S.
warplanes following the Sept. 11 attacks.
"We are happy [with the decision]," said Alla Chakaryan, a spokeswoman for the
Consulate General of the Republic of Armenia in Los Angeles. "We are not
terrorists and never have been. We have never supported terrorism."