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Humanitarian Pays With Life for Feeding the Children of Iraq: Government Duplicity
19 March 2011
By Katherine Hughes
February 26, 2011, marks the eighth anniversary of the
imprisonment of Dr. Rafil Dhafir. Dhafir continues to
pay the price for feeding the children of Iraq during
the US- and UK-sponsored UN sanctions against that
country.
According to the United Nations' own statistics, every
month throughout the 1990's, 6,000 children under the
age of five in Iraq were dying from lack of food and
access to simple medicines. Three senior UN officials
resigned because of what they considered a "genocidal"
policy of sanctions against Iraq. Dhafir's charity,
Help the Needy (HTN), openly sent food and medicines
to starving civilians in Iraq during the brutal
embargo.
Seven government agencies investigated Dhafir and HTN
for many years. They intercepted his mail, email,
faxes and telephone calls; bugged his office and hotel
rooms; went through his trash; and conducted physical
surveillance. They were unable to find any evidence of
links to terrorism, and no charges of terrorism were
ever brought against Dhafir. Yet he and other HTN
associates were subjected to high-profile arrests in
the early morning of February 26, 2003, just weeks
before the US invasion of Iraq. Simultaneous to the
arrests, between the hours of 6 AM and 10 AM, law
enforcement agents interrogated 150 predominantly
Muslim families because they had donated to HTN. On
that day, former attorney general John Ashcroft
announced that "funders of terrorism have been
arrested."
In light of the demonization of Muslims in the US in
the post-9/11 period and the fact that the government
was hinting at terrorism connections without bringing
any charges, I felt compelled to attend all of
Dhafir's 14-week trial; I did not know Dhafir before
attending. I have had a passion for protecting civil
liberties since I was 14 years old, when I saw a
documentary film about the Allies going into
Bergen-Belsen. For 38 years, I have been a voracious
reader of firsthand accounts of what happened in
Germany in the 1930's. I always knew that should
anything like that happen in my lifetime, I wanted no
part of it.
Dhafir was born in Iraq in 1948. He completed medical
school before immigrating to the US in 1972 and has
been a US citizen for more than 30 years. As an
oncologist in an underserved community, Dhafir treated
many of his patients for free, paying for expensive
chemotherapy out of his own pocket. He is regarded as
a pillar of the Central New York Muslim community and
a well-known national and international figure.
Although charged with white-collar crimes, Dhafir was
held without bail for 19 months before trial, which
greatly impeded his ability to prepare his defense.
The trial's proceedings showed Dhafir to be a devout,
compassionate man who was highly esteemed by all of
his associates; the chilling message his conviction
sent to the Muslim community cannot be overstated.
Dhafir was convicted on 59 counts of white-collar
crime (the government had made a mistake in one of the
counts, and the jury was not allowed to deliberate on
it) and is currently serving 22 years for a crime he
was never convicted of in a court of law: money
laundering to help terrorist organizations. Dhafir is
imprisoned in a special Communications Management Unit
(CMU) that houses almost exclusively Muslim and/or
Arab prisoners.
Before attending Dhafir's trial, I spent my entire
life secure in the knowledge that my civil rights
would always be respected. I no longer believe this to
be true.
Iraq Under Sanctions and Dhafir's Humanitarian
Response
Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait on August 1, 1990; US
sanctions against Iraq were put in place the next day.
On January 17, 1991, the first bombs of the Gulf War
were dropped on Baghdad.
Before the war, the people of Iraq had a standard of
living in some ways comparable to that of many Western
countries. Although it was a brutal dictatorship, the
government provided universal health care and
education, including college, for all of its citizens.
There was very little illiteracy, and the education
and health systems were the best in the region. The
sanctions changed all that.
Several government witnesses of Iraqi descent broke
down on the stand when they began to talk about the
effects of the sanctions on their families. Each time
this happened, the prosecution immediately interrupted
the testimony. In fact, throughout Dhafir's trial, the
government did its utmost to prevent any discussion of
the conditions in Iraq under the sanctions. When the
defense attempted to question Susan Hutner of the
Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) about the Oil
for Food program, the court ruled the line of
questioning irrelevant. Government employees,
including Hutner, testified to having no knowledge of
the effects of the sanctions. As the government
attorney addressing the situation in Iraq, Hutner
helped draft the initial legal documentation to
implement the sanctions and then worked on them for 12
years.
During the Gulf War, more bombs were dropped on Iraq
in a six-week period than were dropped in the whole of
World War II; the country was devastated. In total,
these bombs were at least six times more powerful than
two atomic bombs. Many types of bombs were used,
including ones containing depleted uranium (DU), the
waste matter from nuclear plants; hundreds of tons of
DU ammunition now lie scattered throughout Iraq. The
DU dust has entered the food chain through the soil
and the water. As a result, many diseases formerly
unseen in Iraq are now prevalent there. Many pregnant
women delivered babies as early as six months, and
many babies were born with terrible deformities.
Cancer rates increased dramatically. These effects
have been compounded by the current war.
All major bridges and communication systems were
bombed, making communications both inside and outside
the country extremely difficult. The water
purification system was bombed and the UN never
allowed it to be repaired; as a result, 15 years'
worth of raw sewage piled up in the streets and
resulted in widespread disease and death, particularly
among the young and the very old. Hospitals and
schools were not spared.
As a result of the bombings and sanctions, the health
and education systems in Iraq, once the best in the
region, became the worst.
The United States led the effort to place restrictive
sanctions on Iraq. When Madeleine Albright, then-US
ambassador to the United Nations, was asked in a CBS
interview if the deaths of half a million children
were a price worth paying to punish Hussein, she
infamously replied, "I think this is a very hard
choice, but the price - we think the price is worth
it." When adults and children over the age of five are
included, the number of civilians killed as a direct
result of the sanctions rises to between 1.5 and 2
million.
It was in direct response to this humanitarian
catastrophe that Dhafir founded HTN. For 13 years, he
worked tirelessly to help publicize the plight of the
Iraqi people and to raise funds to help them.
According to the government, Dhafir donated $1.4
million of his own money over the years. As an
oncologist, he was also concerned about Iraq's
skyrocketing cancer rates and the role of DU.
Government Duplicity
From the outset of Dhafir's case, the government was
duplicitous. Using unfair tactics and innuendo and
aided by a compliant media, the government transformed
Dhafir's community image from that of a compassionate
humanitarian into one of a crook and supporter of
terrorism.
Just before the start of Dhafir's trial in October
2004, Michael Powell of The Washington Post wrote:
"There is a shadow-boxing quality to the terror
allegations lodged against Dhafir. In August [2004],
Gov. George E. Pataki (R) described Dhafir's as a
'money laundering case to help terrorist organizations
... conduct horrible acts.' Prosecutors hinted at
national security reasons for holding Dhafir without
bail. But no evidence was offered to support the
allegations."
Pataki's description of Dhafir was perfectly timed to
reach potential jurors. While national and state
figures tarred Dhafir with the terrorist brush,
then-district attorney Glenn Suddaby (now a federal
judge) and local prosecutors maintained that Dhafir
was nothing more than a common thief. The prosecution
even successfully petitioned the presiding judge to
exclude any mention of terrorism from the proceedings.
This meant that throughout the trial, the prosecution
could hint at more serious (terrorism) charges, but
the defense was prohibited from addressing these
inflammatory innuendos head-on. The government's
"shadow-boxing" gave a surreal feel to the
proceedings; what was happening in the courtroom was
not what the trial was really about.
The first indictment against Dhafir contained 14
charges related only to the Iraq sanctions. Later,
when Dhafir refused to accept a plea agreement, the
government piled on more charges, and he eventually
faced a 60-count indictment that included violating
federal regulations related to economic sanctions
imposed against Iraq, money laundering, mail and wire
fraud, tax evasion, visa fraud - all related to
running the charity - and Medicare fraud.
Medicare charges usually involve fictitious patients
and made-up illnesses; none of these factors were
present in Dhafir's case. The government never
contested that patients received care and
chemotherapy. Its argument for all 25 counts was that,
because Dhafir was sometimes not present in his office
when patients were treated, the Medicare claim forms
were filled out incorrectly, and he was thus not due
any reimbursement for treatment or for the expensive
chemotherapy his office had administered.
Mrs. Dhafir's cross-examination by the defense also
took on a shadow-boxing quality. Mrs. Dhafir was Dr.
Dhafir's bookkeeper, and took a plea deal by pleading
guilty to one count of lying to a government agent;
she had told a government agent that her husband had
been present in his medical office on a day that he
had not been. On the stand, she answered questions
about the intricacies of Medicare reimbursement and
identified office staff signatures on Medicare
reimbursement forms. While she testified, a large
screen opposite the jury featured an excerpt from the
Medicare handbook, which said that in the event of a
billing error, "a refund would be requested."
This was the backdrop as Mrs. Dhafir described the
mayhem at her house on the day of her husband's
arrest. (She was not arrested on that day and did not
face any charge until later.) Her husband left for
work at his usual time, 6:30 AM. After he left, the
doorbell rang. Before Mrs. Dhafir could answer the
door, five FBI agents broke it down. Finding her on
the other side, they held guns to her head.
Helicopters and local media hovered over the house as
85 government agents visited the house throughout the
day. Mrs. Dhafir spent the day in her nightclothes and
was not allowed to shut the door when she went to the
bathroom.
Jennifer Van Bergen, author of "The Twilight of
Democracy," wrote a two-part article on Dhafir's case
entitled "New American Law: The Case of Dr. Dhafir"
and "New American Law: Legal Strategies and Precedents
in the Dhafir Case." In these and other writings, Van
Bergen warns about the danger of civil liberties being
undermined when the government uses parallel legal
tracks that were never intended to be mixed. She notes
that, as happened in Dhafir's case, conspiracy laws
and money-laundering laws used "creatively" with the
PATRIOT Act and the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (IEEPA) can be used to construct a vastly
distorted picture.
"Collateral Damage: How the War on Terror Hurts
Charities, Foundations, and the People They Serve," a
July 2008 report by OMB Watch, a nonprofit watchdog
organization that monitors the White House Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), describes the difficult
terrain that Muslim charities must navigate:
"Since 2001, the Department of the Treasury's Office
of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and the Justice
Department have incrementally expanded their
interpretation of the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (IEEPA) and what is considered prohibited
'material support' of, or 'otherwise associat[ing]
with,' designated terrorist organizations or
individuals. Originally understood to be direct
transfers of funds or goods, 'material support' is now
interpreted to include legitimate charitable aid that
may 'otherwise cultivate support' for a designated
organization. Furthermore, 'other-wise associated
with' can include indirect or past relationships, even
when there is no claim that the relationship included
aiding terrorists or participating in terrorist plots
or conspiracies."
Inconsistencies in the government's position were a
startling feature of Dhafir's case from its inception
and suggested two possibilities: either one hand of
the government didn't know what the other was doing,
or the government was deliberately aiming to deceive.
The fact that the district attorney and local
prosecutors claimed Dhafir's conviction as a
successful prosecution in the "war on terror" suggests
that the government's duplicity was a strategy from
the outset. Mrs. Dhafir is now listed on the
government's list of successful terrorism prosecutions
along with her husband and other HTN associates,
including Dhafir's personal accountant, an older man
from a small town in upstate New York who was also
subject to a high-profile arrest.
According to the OMB Watch report, "The incremental
expansion of what is prohibited activity, coupled with
the vague standards defining alleged terrorist
associations, makes it increasingly difficult for
charities and foundations to predict what constitutes
illegal behavior. Consequently, the US nonprofit
community operates in fear of what may spark OFAC to
use its power to shut them down."
Dr. Dhafir's case sets a legal precedent and means
that others who provide humanitarian and medical
assistance to those in need could end up like him: put
away for the rest of their lives.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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