Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
International

US Announce New Limits on Racial Profiling, South Asians Dismayed

IANS, 09 Dec, 2014 12:28 PM
  • US Announce New Limits on Racial Profiling, South Asians Dismayed
Sikh, Muslim and South Asian Communities have expressed dismay over new guidelines that ban racial profiling by federal law enforcement officers but do not apply to screeners at airports or border check points.
 
The new guidelines announced by Attorney General Eric Holder Monday replace the 2003 Bush administration rules. They prohibit profiling based on race, ethnicity, national origin, gender, religion or sexual orientation.
 
But the new rules apply only to federal officers, such as the FBI and Secret Service and any local law enforcement that work with them on task forces.
 
"We are particularly troubled by a critical exemption for several key federal law enforcement agencies that allows these agencies to explicitly continue profiling, mapping, and surveilling communities in the name of national security investigations," said The South Asian Americans Leading Together(SAALT).
 
It joined the National Network of Arab American Communities, the Sikh Coalition, OneAmerica, Rights Working Group, the Southern Border Communities Coalition, and the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans in expressing deep concerns over the new rules.
 
The exemption given to several key agencies "essentially allows the profiling of broad swaths of individuals, and many communities as a whole, including South Asian, Muslim, Arab, Middle Eastern, Latino, and border communities," it said.
 
"Justice and civil rights protections cannot be dispensed on a sliding scale," SAALT said.
 
"Immigrants and communities of colour risk continuing to be treated as econd-class citizens by the very law enforcement officials tasked to protect them."
 
Condemning the use of profiling by all law enforcement agencies against any individual or community, SAALT said it "joins Arab, Muslim, Middle Eastern, Black, Latino, and border communities to continue our work to seek a more fair, just, and inclusive society where all individuals can live free from discrimination."
 
Rejecting the "flawed and misleading" guidelines, the Sikh Coalition, the largest Sikh advocacy organisation in the US, moved to petition the White House and Congress, and sent protest letters to justice and homeland security departments.
 
"The guidance is like a used car with new paint. The car looks better, but once you look underneath the hood, you realize it's unsafe to drive," said Rajdeep Singh, Director of Law and Policy at the Sikh Coalition.
 
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) also expressed concerns over the new guidelines retaining what it called "Muslim carve-outs on profiling by government agencies at airports and borders."
 
"CAIR is dismayed that at a time when our nation is struggling to come to terms with a series of high-profile police killings of unarmed African-Americans, the DOJ (Department of Justice) would release revised profiling guidelines that include loopholes for targeting US Muslims and Hispanics," it said.

MORE International ARTICLES

NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade organizers say gay group to march under own banner for 1st time

NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade organizers say gay group to march under own banner for 1st time
NEW YORK, N.Y. - Organizers of next year's St. Patrick's Day Parade in New York City say a gay group will be allowed to march under its own banner for the first time....

NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade organizers say gay group to march under own banner for 1st time

Online or in cloud systems, privacy can be an elusive concept, as photo hacking case shows

Online or in cloud systems, privacy can be an elusive concept, as photo hacking case shows
Whether famous or seemingly anonymous, people from all walks of life put all sorts of things online or into cloud-based storage systems, from vital financial...

Online or in cloud systems, privacy can be an elusive concept, as photo hacking case shows

Obama says US won't be intimidated by Islamic State after second 'horrific' beheading video

Obama says US won't be intimidated by Islamic State after second 'horrific' beheading video
TALLINN, Estonia - President Barack Obama said Wednesday that the United States will not be intimidated by Islamic State militants after the beheading of a second American...

Obama says US won't be intimidated by Islamic State after second 'horrific' beheading video

Indian in UAE unable to pay bills, hospital says go home

Indian in UAE unable to pay bills, hospital says go home
An uninsured Indian man has run up more than $160,000 in medical bills after he suffered a brain haemorrhage and spent about six months in an Abu Dhabi...

Indian in UAE unable to pay bills, hospital says go home

India, Japan to elevate strategic partnership

India, Japan to elevate strategic partnership
Prime Minister Narendra Modi Monday said relations with Japan were of the "highest priority" for his government and announced a slew of initiatives...

India, Japan to elevate strategic partnership

Indian-Americans pay a price for running convenience stores

Indian-Americans pay a price for running convenience stores
Back in 2006, Joe Biden, then a Senate candidate ran into trouble for a remark that "you cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin' Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent."...

Indian-Americans pay a price for running convenience stores