THE HANDSTAND |
LATE AUTUMN2008
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information
clearing house
At JFK
Airport, Denying Basic Rights Is Just Another Day at the
Office
I was recently stopped by Homeland Security as I was
returning from a trip to Syria. What I saw in the hours
that followed shocked and disturbed me.
By
Emily Feder
21/08/08 "AlterNet" -- - I arrived at
JFK Airport two weeks ago after a short vacation to Syria
and presented my American passport for re-entry to the
United States. After 28 hours of traveling, I had settled
into a hazy awareness that this was the last, most
familiar leg of a long journey. I exchanged friendly
words with the Homeland Security official who was
recording my name in his computer. He scrolled through my
passport, and when his thumb rested on my Syrian visa, he
paused. Jerking toward the door of his glass-enclosed
booth, he slid my passport into a dingy green plastic
folder and walked down the hallway, motioning for me to
follow with a flick of his wrist. Where was he taking me,
I asked him. "You'll find out," he said.
We got to an enclosed holding area in the arrivals
section of the airport. He shoved the folder into my hand
and gestured toward four sets of Homeland Security guards
sitting at large desks. Attached to each desk were metal
poles capped with red, white and blue siren lights. I
approached two guards carrying weapons and wearing
uniforms similar to New York City police officers, but
they shook their heads, laughed and said, "Over
there," pointing in the direction of four
overflowing holding pens. I approached different desks
until I found an official who nodded and shoved my green
folder in a crowded metal file holder. When I asked him
why I was there, he glared at me, took a sip from his
water bottle, bit into a sandwich, and began to dig
between his molars with his forefinger. I found a seat
next to a man who looked about my age -- in his late 20s
-- and waited.
Omar (not his real name) finished his fifth year in
biomedical engineering at City College in June. He had
just arrived from Beirut, where he visited his family and
was waiting to go home to the apartment he shared with
his brother in Harlem. Despite his near-perfect English
and designer jeans, Omar looked scared. He rubbed his
hands and rocked softly in his seat. He had been waiting
for hours already, and, as he pointed out, a number of
people -- some sick, elderly, pregnant or holding sobbing
babies -- had too. There were approximately 70 people
detained in our cordoned-off section: All were Arab (with
the exception of me and the friend I traveled with), and
almost all had arrived from Dubai, Amman or Damascus.
Many were U.S. citizens.
We were in the front row, sitting a few feet from two
guards' desks. They sneered at each bewildered arrival,
told jokes in whispers, swiveled in their office chairs
and greeted passing guards who stopped to talk -- guards
who had a habit of looping their fingers into their
holsters. One asked his friend how many nationalities
were represented in the room. "About 20. Some of
everything today."
No one who had been detained knew precisely why they were
there. A few people were led into private rooms; others
were questioned out in the open at desks a few feet from
the crowd and then allowed to pass through customs. Some
were sent to another section of the holding area with
large computer screens and cameras, and then brought back.
The uninformed consensus among the detainees was that
some people would be fingerprinted, have their irises
scanned and be sent back to the countries from which they
had disembarked, regardless of citizenship status; others
would be fingerprinted and allowed to stay; and the
unlucky ones would be detained indefinitely and moved to
a more permanent facility.
There was one British tourist in the group. Paul (also
not his real name) was traveling with three friends who
had passed through customs soon after their plane landed
and were waiting for him on the other side of the metal
barrier; he suspected he had been detained because of his
dark skin. When he asked if he could go to the bathroom,
one of the guards said, "I wouldn't." "What
if someone has to?" I asked. "They will just
have to hold it," the guard responded with a smile.
Paul began to cry. I watched as he, over the course of
four hours, went from feeling exuberant about his trip to
New York to despising the entire country. "I speak
the Queen's English," he said to me. "I'm third-generation
British. I came to America because I've always wanted to
come here, and now they've got me so scared that all I
want to do is go home. We're paying for your stupid war
anyway."
To be powerless and mocked at the same time makes one
feel ashamed, which leads quickly to rage. Within a few
hours of my arrival, I saw at least 10 people denied the
right to use the bathroom or buy food and water. I
watched my traveling companion duck under a barrier, run
to the bathroom and slip back into the holding section --
which, of course, someone of another ethnicity in a state
of panic would be very reluctant to do. The United States
is good at naming enemies, but apparently we are even
better at making them, especially of individuals. I don't
know if it's worse for national security -- and more
embarrassing for Americans -- that this is the first
experience tourists have of our country, or that some U.S.
citizens get treated this way upon entering their own
country.
The guard who had been picking his molars for hours
quietly mispronounced the names of people whose turn it
was to be questioned, muttering each surname three times
and then moving on. When he called Omar from City College
to his desk, I moved closer to hear the interview. "Where
did you go?" the officer asked. "What is your
address in the United States? Is your brother here
illegally? Do you support Hezbollah? What do you think of
Hezbollah in general? How do you pay for your life here?
How many people live with you? Are you sure it's just you
and your brother? Who are your friends?" Omar
answered respectfully and emphatically; he was then asked
to wait by the side of the desk, from which he was
ushered toward one of the rooms.
After four hours, I finally demanded to speak to the
guards' supervisor, and he was called down. I asked if
the detainees could file a formal complaint. He said
there were complaint forms (which, in English and Spanish,
direct one to the Department of Homeland Security's Web
site, where one must enter extensive personal information
in order to file a "Trip Summary") but
initially refused to hand them out or to give me his
telephone number. "The Department of Homeland
Security is understaffed, underfunded, and I have men
here who are doing 14-hour days." He tried to
intimidate me when I wrote down his name -- "So, you're
writing down our names. Well, we have more on you"
-- and asked me questions about my address and my
profession in front of the rest of the people detained. I
pointed out a few of the families who had missed their
flights and had been waiting seven hours. His voice
barely controlled, his lip curled into a smirk, he
explained slowly, condescendingly, that they need only go
to the ticket counter at Jet Blue and reschedule so they
could fly out in an hour. One mother responded with what
he must have already known: Jet Blue goes to most
destinations only once or twice a day and her whole
family would have to sleep in the airport.
A large crowd began to gather. Everyone wanted to voice
complaints. I explained to the supervisor that his guards
had been making people afraid. He flipped through the
green files, tossing the American passports to the front
of the pile. "You should have gone first, before
these people. American citizens first -- that's how it
should be." In the face of dozens of requests and
questions, he turned and left.
The guards processed me then, ignoring the order of
arrivals, if there ever had been one. They refused to
distribute more complaint forms or call the supervisor
back down at the request of Arab families. One officer
threatened, "I'm talking politely to you now. If you
don't sit down, I won't be talking politely to you
anymore." One announced that because "the
American girl" had gotten angry, the families would
have to wait a few more hours. "The supervisor is
not coming back."
I reassured my Homeland Security interrogator that I did
not make any connections with Hezbollah or with anyone I
knew to be associated with such an organization. I am not
a member of any terrorist group. In fact, my visit to
Syria had been so apolitical and touristy that I felt an
embarrassing affinity with the pastel-shirted families
waiting by the Air France baggage carousels in the
distance, whom I knew I would eventually join.
As I walked out of the enclosure, some people thanked me,
squeezing my arm and putting their hands on my shoulders.
It was shocking that briefly standing up to someone
overseeing an abuse of civil rights -- in JFK airport, in
the United States, where we supposedly have laws and a
democratic judicial system -- could be perceived as
heroic. I had nothing to lose, but the other people being
detained had everything to lose.
In the past five years I have worked for human rights and
refugee advocacy organizations in Serbia, Russia and
Croatia, including the International Rescue Committee and
USAID. I have traveled to many different places, some
supposedly repressive, and have never seen people treated
with the kind of animosity that Homeland Security showed
that night. In Syria, border control officers were stern
but polite. At other borders there have been
bureaucracies to contend with -- excruciating for both
Americans and other foreign nationals. I've met Russian
officials with dead, suspicious looks in their eyes and
arms tired from stamping so many visas, but in America,
the Homeland Security officials I encountered were very
much alive -- like vultures waiting to eat.
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