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Saturday, July 04, 2009 | 12 Rajab 1430  
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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
altmuslim this week - june 29, 2009 - This week, reeling over the death of Michael Jackson (or is it Mikaeel?), a brutal (and brutally unfair?) new film about the stoning of women in Iran, and our good friend Farah Pandith - the most effective behind-the-scenes American Muslim you've never met - is promoted to a new office by Secretary Clinton.
ASIDES
editor's blog
US outreach to Muslims in good hands - Several of us at altmuslim have had the opportunity to work with Farah Pandith, who has just been appointed by Secretary Clinton to be a special representative to Muslim communities worldwide. (June 27, 2009)

Her name is Neda - Many have died tragic - and silent - deaths in the post-election violence in Iran. But one woman, Neda Agha Soltan, became a symbol with her death caught on video. Here, Neda's fiancee, Caspian Makan, comments on her story in comments transcribed exclusively for altmuslim.com. (June 25, 2009)

CONTRIBUTORS
PODCASTS
altmuslim review 032 - Muslim writers everywhere! We speak about the new wave of Western Muslim literature and interview two authors with recently released books. Our own Irfan Yusuf talks about his memoir, Once Were Radicals and Reza Aslan tells us more about his second book, How to Win a Cosmic War (June 11, 2009)

altmuslim review 031 - Oh, Bama! What does the election of Barack Obama mean for American Muslims, who were both courted and shunned during a long campaign? We speak with American Muslim Democratic activists who were gathered in Washington for the historic inauguration. (March 5, 2009)

ELSEWHERE
State-sponsored Sufism, Ali Eteraz, Foreign Policy, June 10, 2009.

Pushing the Envelope Without Breaking It, Shahed Amanullah, The Mosque in Morgantown, June 2, 2009.

Obama in Egypt: Let the unsaid be said, Zahed Amanullah, Patheos.com, May 28, 2009.

Zahed will be a panelist at Divan 2.0, a debate on the future of the Muslim internet sponsored by the Radical Middle Way at the London School of Economics in London, England, May 22, 2009.

Once Were Radicals (published by Allen and Unwin), the first book by Associate Editor Irfan Yusuf, is released in Australia, May 4, 2009.

Shahed and Wajahat will be speaking at the 3rd Annual Leadership Summit presented by the Council for the Advancement of Muslim Professionals in Princeton, NJ, May 2, 2009.

Shahed will be leading a workshop on Media Strategies & Techniques at the Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow conference in New York, NY, April 24-25, 2009.

Bringing it all back home, Wajahat Ali, The Guardian, Comment is Free, April 9, 2009.

Zahed will be conducting a two day workshop on Blogging and New Media for Italian students at the United States Embassy, Rome, Italy, April 8-9, 2009.

Crusading for Modern Islamic Art, Shahed Amanullah, Beliefnet, March 26, 2009.

Wajahat will be speaking at the Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow conference in Doha, Qatar (January 16-19, 2009)

Finding the middle ground, Hesham Hassaballa, Philadelphia Inquirer, January 8, 2009.

Shahed will be speaking about Muslims in the political process at the 8th annual Texas Dawah Convention in Houston, Texas (December 27, 2008)

Skyscraping ambition for Mecca, Ali Eteraz, The Guardian (UK), Comment is Free (December 18, 2008)

Zahed will be leading a technology workshop for European Muslim professionals at the Salzburg Global Seminar, Salzburg, Austria (November 16-20, 2008)

Zahed will be a keynote speaker at the inaugural meeting of the Network of European Muslim Technology Entrepreneurs, in Madrid, Spain (November 14, 2008)

Shahed will be a featured panelist at Red Faith/Blue Faith: Religion in the 2008 Election and Beyond at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC (November 7, 2008)

Let the Global Islamic Conspiracy Begin, Ali Eteraz, Jewcy, (November 5, 2008)

Zahed will be a guest on Press TV's Islam & Life, hosted by Tariq Ramadan, speaking on French and American Muslim experiences (November 3, 2008)

Zahed will be a guest on Irish broadcaster RTE's Spectrum radio show, speaking about Barack Obama and the Muslim factor in the US presidential election (November 1, 2008)

IN THE NEWS
Islamic Society reaches out to other faiths - "ISNA is very interested in extending their connections with Protestant groups," said Rafia Zakaria, an Indiana lawyer and associate editor at altmuslim.com, a Web site that looks at Muslim issues. "Having a figure as high profile as him gives them legitimacy to extend those kinds of alliances with church groups that have a significant amount of power in the United States." (June 21, 2009)

American Muslims, Jews rate Obama’s speech - "He was really pressing for people to say in public what they say in private. Everybody knows what the solutions to a lot of these problems are and I think there is vast agreement on what they are going to be. But nobody really talks about it and puts the cards on the table," said Shahed Amanullah, editor of the Web site altmuslim.com. (June 5, 2009)

A place to explore Muslim American life - "The biggest challenge facing us is more internal - asking the deeper question. Okay, now that we know that we are Muslim Americans or American Muslims, whatever you want to call us, what does that mean?" (May 23, 2009)

The great potential for online Muslim media - "A recent study in the US implies a correlation between non-Muslims who fear Islam and those who don't know any Muslims. The more Muslims get to know their non-Muslim neighbours, the more ability they will have to influence them." (April 29, 2009)

Obama’s entreaty to Islam surprises Muslims - "Here's where the American public is going, and here's where Obama is going and trying to head it off," said Shahed Amanullah, editor and publisher of altmuslim.com. The Bush administration asked Amanullah for help in shaping dialogue with the American Muslim community. "He's heading it off on a global level," Amanullah said. "He's starting at a core of the problem. The core of the problem is the crisis overseas." (April 8, 2009)

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Guantanamo Detentions
In Guantanamo rulings, profile is everything
The contrast between the two Supreme Court Guantanamo rulings issued yesterday is striking. In the case that is in the public eye, the Court steps up to the plate. But in the low-profile case, the Court doesn’t risk confronting the executive.

The Supreme Court this week issued two decisions on detainee policy in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and Iraq. The first has been correctly hailed as a watershed rejection of the Bush Administration’s effort to establish national security policies free of law, while the second has been largely overlooked. Since I am one of the counsel in that second case - which concerns two US citizens of Arab descent who have been detained by US forces in Iraq for more than three years - I cannot overlook the second case, especially because the Court concluded that the government has power to hand our clients to Iraqi authorities where they may be tortured and executed.

The contrast between the two cases bears closer scrutiny, and calls for caution even as celebration of the Guantanamo decision continues. For even though the Court has rejected the Administration’s position that the island base is a lawless enclave, where individuals can be imprisoned and denied the chance to challenge the basic facts behind their detention, it has paid less attention to the risk of human rights violations in a less high-profile context.

Guantanamo has become the focus for international condemnation of the Bush Administration’s cavalier attitude to human rights and basic freedoms. Calls for the base’s closure – now echoed by both presidential candidates – reflect a consensus that the base inflicts too high a reputational cost on America. To be sure, the wretched human rights record of the base plays a role. But the disparity between the presidential commitment to closing Guantanamo, and the candidates’ silence on equally disturbing and harmful practices such as “extraordinary rendition” is telling: Human rights may matter less than how the world views a practice.

The Boumediene v. Bush case, which was decided on Thursday by the Court, concerned the narrow but critical issue of whether the detainees have access to “habeas corpus”: the traditional legal remedy for unlawful executive detention. In two statutes, enacted in 2005 and 2006, the US Congress had purported to extinguish the right of detainees at Guantanamo to the habeas remedy, and to replace it with a different legal remedy - albeit one with a crucial difference. Under the new statute, a detainee had only limited authority to challenge the facts on which his detention was based. In particular, he could not argue that the military had failed to take note of exculpatory information, i.e., information that showed his innocence.

To defend this new regime, the Administration made two arguments: First, that the detainees were not entitled to the protection of habeas corpus, which is enshrined in the US Constitution, because they were outside the territory of the United States. The Court rejected this argument, which would have basic rights stop whenever the Administration labeled a territory as non-US. “The test” for habeas protection, wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy, “must not be subject to manipulation by those whose power it is deigned to restrain.”

Second, the government argued that the new statutory remedy was adequate as a substitute for the habeas remedy. Again, the Court rejected this argument, pointing to the need to contest facts as the basis for a meaningful hearing.

The Court, however, pointedly did not address the hard questions of who can be detained, and what exact procedures will be used after the cases are remanded to the district courts to make factual and legal determinations. The first question - i.e., who falls into the category of “enemy combatant” - is especially important to the issue of who will remain detained even after their habeas hearing.

The Court’s Boumediene decision, in short, is about the power of the courts to review—and not what standard the courts will use when they do assess the legality of a detention decision.

By contrast, the other case decided yesterday (Munaf v. Geren) concerns both the power of the courts to review detention operations and the substance of its review. In two cases concerning US citizens detained in Iraq, and threatened with transfer to Iraqi authorities for trial, long with possible torture and execution - the Court rejected the government’s argument that no review was available, but help that even when review was available, no relief would issue.

The Administration in this case had argued that the fact of UN authorization for the Iraq operation meant that any detention in Iraq was the responsibility of the UN, and not the US - even if it was conducted exclusively by US officials. This would have been a dangerous ruling, and the Court properly dismissed it entirely.

But the Court accepted the government’s other argument - that as a matter or prudence it would be better not to give relief to individuals who were detained in Iraq and against whom Iraqi criminal proceedings were pending. Nevertheless, the Court left open the possibility of additional challenges based the risk of torture.

This is deeply regrettable, because it blinks the grave and substantial risk of torture and unfairness in Iraqi proceedings. It short-changes the rights of US citizens in the name of diplomacy. And it undercuts the incentives of the executive branch not to collaborate with governments that torture since in many cases that information will not be available to detainees.

The contrast between the two cases - and the public reaction to the two cases - is striking. In the case that is in the public eye, where the reputation of the US is on the line, the Court steps up to the plate. But in the low-profile case, the Court doesn’t risk confronting the executive. And this despite the fact that, as the Court notes, there are 24,000 detainees in Iraq. Although only two are US citizens, many of the Iraq detainees are held in terrible conditions. There are persistent problems with torture and abuse in the Iraqi justice system, as even recent State Department reports suggest. But these are note issues clearly in the public eye.

(Photo: Keith Ivey via flickr under a Creative Commons license)

Aziz Huq directs the Liberty and National Security Project at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU and is co-author of "Unchecked and Unbalanced: Presidential Power in a Time of Terror."

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