Judge says US blundered in barring Muslim academic

A Malaysian architecture professor won a legal challenge that sought removal of her name from the US government’s no-fly list.

A federal judge in San Francisco said Tuesday in a brief, two-page court filing that the government’s inclusion of Rahinah Ibrahim on the list was a mistake, AP reports.

US District Judge William Alsup ordered her name stricken from the list _ if in fact it is still on the list. The judge kept his detailed ruling under seal until April 15 so the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals can rule on the government’s appeal to toss out the lawsuit.

The US Department of Justice has refused to disclose Ibrahim’s current flight status throughout her eight-year legal fight, including during a two-week bench trial late last year.

The two-page filing the judge released publicly was only a notice that the former Stanford University doctoral candidate had prevailed in a fight to clear her name that began with her arrest at San Francisco International Airport in 2005 and authorities telling her she was on the no fly list.

Ibrahim said she was mistakenly placed on the list because of her national origin and Muslim faith. Ibrahim testified via videotape during the trial that the FBI visited her Stanford apartment the month before her arrest and asked whether she had connections to the Malaysian terror group, Jemaah Islamiyah. She denied any connections to the group specifically or terrorism generally.

The government argues that national security interests could be jeopardized if it’s forced to disclose _ while defending the lawsuit in open court _ how Ibrahim was initially placed on the list and whether she remains on it. Government attorneys didn’t disclose many details during the two-week trial and objected repeatedly when Ibrahim’s attorneys asked detailed questions of witnesses.

Nonetheless, the judge made clear in his court filing Tuesday that he believed Ibrahim was initially placed on the no fly list by mistake. She claims she was placed there because of her Muslim faith.

The judge said the evidence presented at trial “shows that the action resulted from an error by the government” and that the remedy “requires the government to cleanse and/or correct its lists and records of the mistaken information and to certify under oath that such correction(s) have been made.”

Alsup said by certifying that Ibrahim’s name is no longer on the list, “the government concedes that plaintiff is not a threat to our national security.”

The US Department of Justice press office in Washington D.C. didn’t return a phone call and email inquiry placed late Tuesday.

“Justice has finally been done for our client, an innocent woman who was wrongly ensnared in the government’s flawed watch listing system,” said Elizabeth Pipkin, Ibrahim’s attorney.

Ibrahim, 48, lives in Malaysia with her husband and four children and is dean of the architecture and engineering school at the University of Malaysia. She has been barred from returning to the United States since her arrest in 2005 on her way to a scientific conference in Hawaii.

SOURCE: THE STANDARD CO HONG KONG

Categories: Americas, Malaysia, United States

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