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Angry local Somalis allege racial profiling, harassment at airports

By: PAUL MCENROE and ALLISON SHERRY

Mohamed Farah has testified before Congress, conferred with the State Department and met with the secretary of Homeland Security. Two weeks ago, he was among a select group invited to the White House for President Obama’s counterterrorism summit.

Somali Racial profiling
profiled: After a White House meeting, Mohamed Farah was singled out for screening again at Reagan National Airport. Photo courtesy Abdifatah Farah

But despite security clearances from the FBI and the U.S. Secret Service, the Somali youth leader from Minneapolis says he cannot board a plane at the Twin Cities airport without being stopped and double-screened by agents of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).

En route to the White House last month, Farah was pulled aside by local TSA agents, who conducted a body search and uttered a demeaning comment before clearing him. After the summit, he said, he endured the same profiling at Washington’s Reagan International Airport before he boarded a flight home.

“You are treated as a second-class citizen,” Farah said, “when you’re trying to change the narrative about being Somali.”

Farah, 30, is among a group of prominent Somali-American leaders in Minnesota who, in recent interviews, described what they say is an ongoing pattern of racial profiling and harassment by TSA agents and U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers.

Their anger helps explain why many Twin Cities Muslims voice skepticism toward the Justice Department’s new community outreach program to battle terrorist recruitment, and it underscores the challenge faced by Minnesota’s U.S. attorney and federal security agencies as they try to build trust in the Somali community.

“You are made to feel as if you are an outcast,” Farah said of his recent screening experiences. “When they finally gave me back my ticket, one of the TSA agents asked me, ‘Hey, were you going to make a run for it if I hadn’t given your ticket back?’ ”

Recognizing the corrosive potential of such incidents, TSA and customs officials said this week they are moving quickly to address the complaints.

The agencies told the Star Tribune they will be sending special teams to meet with local Somalis and anyone who believes they are being stopped at the airport without cause. It appears to be a first-time effort by both agencies to build credibility by meeting directly with members of a specific community to provide assistance with travel and documentation.

TSA and customs officials say they face a daunting mission: Tracking terror threats and screening up to 30,000 travelers daily at the Twin Cities airport, while avoiding the perception of racial profiling. The challenge is especially critical in the Twin Cities, where Somali youth are being aggressively recruited to join terrorist groups in the Middle East.

The balancing act has drawn personal empathy from Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who visited the Twin Cities in November.

“There are people here who say they’d rather fly out of Chicago,” the angered secretary told reporters after meeting with members of the Somali community. Johnson, who is black, ended his remarks by saying, “I think I understand what is like to be the object of profiling.”

TSA and customs officials flatly deny that they use racial profiling and say they have taken pains to meet with Twin Cities Somalis.

“We don’t stop people based on where they were born or how they dress,” said Bill Ferrara, Chicago field director for Customs and Border Protection. “We question people based on where they’re coming from.”

Cliff Van Leuven, TSA security director for Minnesota, said Friday he has not received any complaints about mistreatment at the airport. He said he has taken every meeting, lunch and tea with any Somali who asked to air concerns. “We don’t profile, we don’t discriminate, but we have a serious security job to do,” he said.

Imams and elders, he noted, tell him: “ ‘We’re American citizens, too, and we want to be safe.’ ” As for Farah’s alleged recent airport mistreatment, he said, “That is certainly not acceptable behavior” and vowed to look into the incident.

Read more:Angry local Somalis allege racial profiling

Source: Star Tribune

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