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Rights and Liberties

ACLU: Racial Profiling "Widespread and Pervasive"

By Haider Rizvi, IPS News. Posted July 2, 2009.


Millions of U.S. citizens continue to face discrimination at the hands of law enforcement just because they are not white.
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UNITED NATIONS, Jul 1 (IPS) -- Millions of U.S. citizens continue to face discrimination at the hands of police and other law enforcement agencies just because they are not white, although the country's new leader in the White House is himself of African descent on his father's side.

"Racial profiling remains a widespread and pervasive problem throughout the U.S," said Chandra Bhatnagar of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), lead author of a new report sent to a U.N. rights body this week.

The report submitted to the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) describes past U.S. government policies as "a major cause of the disproportionate stopping and searching" of racial minorities by law enforcement agencies.

"Racial profiling is impacting the lives of millions of people in the African American, Asian, Latino, South Asian, Arab and Muslim communities," Bhatnagar, an attorney who specializes in human rights law, added in a statement.

For example, in one federal program called "Operation Front Line," designed to "detect, deter and disrupt terror operations" among immigrants during the months leading up to the presidential election in November 2004, foreign nationals from Muslim-majority countries were 1,280 times more likely to be targeted than similarly situated individuals from other countries.

Not a single terrorism-related conviction resulted from the interviews conducted under the program.

In its report to CERD, the ACLU noted that despite the change of administration in Washington, this and other types of profiling were still happening in all parts of the United States because the policies adopted by the previous administration have not changed.

Like many other U.S.-based rights advocacy groups, the ACLU holds that the U.S. is guilty of violating the U.N. Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, to which it is a signatory.

About two years ago, a number of rights groups, including the ACLU, concerned about the growing cases of racial discrimination took their case to CERD in Geneva amid calls for scrutiny of the rights situation in the United States.

CERD, an independent panel of experts who are responsible for monitoring global compliance with the 1969 convention, examined the U.S. case, and after considering the written and oral response from the U.S., ruled that Washington was failing to meet its treaty obligations.

In explaining its findings, the 18-member CERD panel said there were "stark racial disparities in U.S. institutions, including its criminal justice system."

Last January, shortly before the end of the George W. Bush administration, U.S. officials submitted a report to CERD defending the policy on racial discrimination, which, critics say they found to be full of "omissions, deficiencies and mischaracterisations".

In a bid to prove that there was nothing wrong with the U.S. policy on racial discrimination and that the administration was in full compliance with the treaty, U.S. officials cited the Justice Department’s "Guidelines Regarding Use of Race by Federal Law Enforcement Agents."

Legal experts think the Bush administration’s attempt to justify its policies was simply misleading because the document did not cover profiling based on religion or national origin. They want CERD to take a critical look at the Justice Department’s guidelines.

"It doesn’t apply to state or local law enforcement agencies, nor does it include any mechanism for enforcement or punishment for violating the recommendations," said Bhatnagar. "It also contains a blanket exception to the recommendations in cases of ‘national security’ and border integrity.’"

The ACLU report suggests that as a result of the Bush policies, people of color have been disproportionately victimised through various government initiatives, including FBI surveillance and questioning, special registration, border stops, immigration enforcement, and the "no fly lists".

Margaret Huang, executive director of Rights Working Group, a broad coalition of a number of rights advocacy organizations, agrees with Bhatnagar.

"The overboard national security and border integrity exceptions have promoted profiling and creates justification for law enforcement agents to profile those who are or appear to be Arab, Muslim, South Asian, or Latino," said Huang, whose group made a joint effort in reaching out to CERD.

Both Huang and Bhatnagar said they want the U.S. government to take "urgent, direct action to rid the nation of the scourge of racial and ethnic profiling and bring this country into conformity with both the Constitution and international human rights obligations."

Though the Obama administration seems willing to change course, it is not clear when it will take concrete steps. Recently, Attorney General Eric Holder stated that ending racial profiling was a "priority" and that profiling is "simply not good law enforcement".

Bhatnagar told IPS that he was "cautiously optimistic" about the Obama administration’s response to his and other rights groups' call for a reversal of the Bush policies on racial profiling.

The ACLU and other groups are also urging Congress to endorse the "End Racial Profiling Act", a legislative proposal that would require authorities to avoid arrest and search activities, as well as to break down data collection by race.

The CERD members are due to meet in Geneva next month. Among other issues, the committee is expected to look into whether or not the U.S. is in compliance with the treaty.


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See more stories tagged with: racism, george w. bush, aclu, racial profiling, u.n. committee on the eli, chandra bhatnagar, u.n. convention on the el, end racial profiling act

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Oh really?
Posted by: axisofoil on Jul 8, 2009 2:43 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everybody is targeted at one time or another. The problem is that those running the show are either dumb as a board or worse. One only needs to go on the ADL website to see whites targeted. See this Homeland Security document now passed out to law enforcement...U//FOUO) Rightwing Extremism:
Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment This is promoted as being the foremost area of terrorist alarm. The ADL is now training the ATF to respond. Legislation passed after the OK city bombing is said to have been so sucessful.
Google 'Brigadier General Benton Partins bomb damage analysis’ then honestly tell me a lone white man did that in Okalahoma. Lone white man got Kennedy?...Martin Luther King?
What is the word illegall for on the beginning of alien? Is it any wonder people get upset when a bill to give "illegalls" driver’s licenses is presented? Think about it.
So Egyptians attacked us on 9/11...let's attack Afghanistan and Iraq. Then after sanctions killed probably over a million innocent people while we looked for WMD's we knew weren't there in the first place, let's make a big joke out of it. The price was worth it? We are hypocrites to the bone. We have always hated Muslims. Look at the way we treat them. Homeland Security is now the 3rd largest government organization. Feel any safer? Careful, that thought may be a crime. unfortunately we live in flatland and nobody is going to get it anyway

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Yeah
Posted by: mikehattan on Jul 8, 2009 3:50 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, I'm not 'coloured' but I am a Merkin. Let me tell you about the new practices of the Credit Card companies that are now tracking how many times we are going to the liquor store? They think...'Hmmmm..Maybe it's because we are despondent at the thought of losing our jobs and not being able to make our payments'?
THATS profiling big time.

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» RE: Yeah Posted by: axisofoil
Fearful people shoot themselves in foot.
Posted by: luzmejor on Jul 9, 2009 6:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Prejudice is always involved in crime prevention because people are embarrassed that crimes are committed under our very noses. They need some way of identifying the crooks, but what if we all could freak out at any moment? What if the violent criminals are not so different from our own dear relatives?

Most crimes are crimes of opportunity and involve fear, rage or the expectation of reward.

The constant hurrying needed in our daily lives is driving untold numbers of people crazy. Of course that is a recipe for violence, especially in the ant hills of cities where genuine privacy is very hard to attain.

Humans are not so advanced toward civility as we always seem to think we are. When so many of us are on the edge, it is just too easy for someone to get pushed over it.

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Racial Profiling
Posted by: Atheistno1 on Jul 9, 2009 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Racial profiling has now become a business for the government. Especially those governments of western culture that play on the 9/11 crap. It has become a paranoid complex that the public have swallowed hook line & sinker with the politicians delight. They have the ability to bury the political enemy with innuendo & threats of broken Human Rights Treaties. It is not as though they don't know who the enemy is or how to deal with them. The average person however is the biggest loser in all of this & I can assure the African American people, that the swinging change of winds are now focused on the anti-religious, Atheist's, skeptics etc.

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expectation
Posted by: hahaho on Jul 30, 2009 5:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most crimes are crimes of opportunity and involve fear, rage or the expectation of reward.links of london
tiffany

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