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Friday, October 30, 2009

The Shooting of Luqman Ameen Abdullah in Dearborn CAIR in Michigan


Luqman Ameen Abdullah


There seems to be a great deal of consternation in the Detroit/Dearborn Muslim community over this week's shooting death of Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah by FBI agents. The shooting erupted when the FBI attempted to arrest Abdullah and other members of his group on charges unrelated to terrorism (illegal possession and sale of firearms and stolen goods).

Below is the reaction of the official weblog of CAIR (Michigan) Director Dawud Walid. It is an editorial today in the Detroit Free Press by Jeff Gerritt, in which Walid is quoted.

Abdullah’s death raises questions and fears

"The funeral of Luqman Ameen Abdullah tomorrow morning will bring Muslim leaders nationwide to Detroit. Abdullah’s life and death have ignited debates on race and religion, police and politics.

People, from Detroit’s east side to South Africa, are questioning how Abdullah died. Left untended, questions like these often answer themselves, sometimes with conspiracy theories or worse. No one should assume government wrongdoing or impropriety, but skepticism, fear and anger have clouded the air. To help clear it, the Justice Department or some outside agency should investigate whether agents properly targeted Abdullah, or could have avoided killing him.

FBI agents killed Abdullah, 53, of Detroit, during a Wednesday raid at a Dearborn warehouse. A 43-page affidavit highlights Abdullah’s alleged hatred of government and police agencies but does not charge him with terrorism. The government described him as an Islamic fundamentalist who advocated violence to establish Muslim rule. Still, for many in the community, Abdullah was a respected imam and neighborhood benefactor.

I spoke last night on Detroit’s east side with two African American Muslims who knew Abdullah and remembered him as a man who took in the homeless and fed the hungry. Neither knew of, or defended, his alleged criminal activities, but they did question whether he had to die and why agents didn’t approach him differently. The account now widely held by community members is that Abdullah was shot repeatedly by agents, after he shot an unleashed police dog, despite official reports that Abdullah fired on the officers.

A spokesman for Dearborn police said today the investigation of Abdullah’s shooting is ongoing and the department couldn’t comment. But Dawud Walid, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Michigan, said a government agent also told him that Abdullah died after shooting the dog. “Is this the kind of excessive force that we black Americans are all too familiar with?” Walid asked. Walid is also troubled by the use of informants and what he called agent provocateurs who entice people into criminal activities.

Abdullah’s death may mark the first killing of a religious leader by U.S. government agents since David Koresh died at the Branch Davidian ranch outside Waco, Texas, in 1993. That incident had some tragic ripples. Walid, who has been interviewed by international journalists about the killing, said Abdullah’s death will affect U.S. relations with Muslim countries — a high priority for President Obama. It could also worsen relations between the FBI and the U.S. Muslim community. Abdullah’s funeral will not bury the questions about his life or death. Government, and the people, need the truth."
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As you can see, the editorial writer-and Walid call into question the FBI version of the incident.

The CAIR Michigan website, like the CAIR national website, is silent on the incident, but Walid is also quoted by the Detroit media as saying that Abdullah was not part of CAIR and was only known as a "respected imam within the Muslim community".

Abdullah was affiliated with a group known as "Ummah", which preached the establishment of an Islamic state within America, which would be under the leadership of Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, formerly known as 1960s Black Panther Party leader H. Rap Brown, currently serving a life sentence for killing a police officer in Atlanta. (CAIR, as a national organization, has participated in Al-Amin's legal defense and appeal, according to the just-published book, "Muslim Mafia".)

Abdullah himself had a well-documented history of making violent statements, especially in regard to killing police.

In Washington, a organization called the American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and Elections has called for an independent investigation of Abdullah's death. The group is an umbrella organization whose members include the American Muslim Alliance, American Muslims for Palestine and CAIR.

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/muslim-coalition-calls-for-probe-into-fbi-shooting-death-of-mich-muslim-67748692.html

1 comment:

Gary Fouse said...

Jane,

I think your analysis is too simplistic. It is not a question of skin color. In the case of this so-called "Christian" militia, if they were plotting to kill cops, I applaud their capture.

Right now it is very hard to generalize about where the current admin wants to try captured terrorists because they are all over the place. They don't even know, but since we have a black president and a black atty general, I think the idea of race being a facor is pretty far out.

Yes, the Constitution should treat all equally, but international terrorism has created a whole new category that doesn't fit snugly in any whole.