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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nukeit who wrote (249)11/13/2001 5:59:18 AM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Welcome aboard.

HOMELAND INSECURITY
Airport-security firm at mercy of Muslims
EEOC case forced company to rehire Arabs, instate Islamic-sensitivity
training program

By Paul Sperry
2001 WorldNetDaily.com

WASHINGTON A leading airport-security firm under fire for hiring
foreigners was pressured by the federal government two-and-a-half years
ago to rehire Arab non-citizens.

Argenbright Security Inc., which provides security at both Washington
Dulles International and Ronald Reagan Washington National airports,
agreed in early 1999 to rehire seven Muslim women after they filed a
religion-bias complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The Justice Department, in the wake of the Sept. 11 hijackings, is
investigating the same company for failing to properly screen its guards.

Argenbright operates the screening posts under contract with United
Airlines at Dulles and Newark International Airport in New Jersey, where
Islamic terrorists hijacked two of the four jumbo jets.

Airport security experts say the EEOC settlement which also mandates
Muslim-sensitivity training for all Argenbright employees goes a long way
toward explaining why 87 percent of the checkpoint screeners at Dulles are
not U.S. citizens. All seven Muslim complainants worked as Dulles
screeners at the time.

"If I were Argenbright and being investigated, I'd tell them, 'You want to
sue us? Go talk to the damn EEOC. They're the ones who forced these people
on us,'" said Steve Elson, a former Federal Aviation Administration
airport-security inspector.

Atlanta-based Argenbright, owned by London-based Securicor PLC, declined
comment. Argenbright runs passenger and luggage checkpoints at most of the
nation's major airports.

Four of the seven Muslim workers are from Sudan, a country on the State
Department's terrorist blacklist. One is from Egypt, and another is from
Afghanistan.

The Muslims contended they were fired by Argenbright for refusing to take
off their head scarves while screening passengers. They said covering
their heads is required by the Koran.

Apparently, United had received complaints from passengers nervous about
Middle Easterners still running security after the year-earlier
U.S. embassy bombings in Africa.

The EEOC complaint was drafted by a lawyer for the Council on
American-Islamic Relations, a Washington-based interest group that has
spoken out in support of terrorist groups and has called for a halt to
U.S. bombing in Afghanistan.

In 1998, after Osama bin Laden was fingered for blowing up the
U.S. embassies, CAIR demanded that a Los Angeles billboard with bin
Laden's picture and the caption, "Enemy No. 1," be removed.

On Sept. 17, CAIR Executive Director Nihad Awad stood next to President
Bush at the Islamic Center of Washington, where Bush pleaded for Americans
to "respect" Muslims and Islam's teachings of "peace." Awad also was
seated near the first lady at Bush's Sept. 20 speech to Congress.

Rep. David E. Bonior, D-Mich., joined CAIR, which publishes booklets
called "An Employer's Guide to Islamic Religious Practices," in denouncing
the firing of the seven Arab non-citizen screeners.

"This incident raises a larger issue: that of widespread and systematic
discrimination against Muslims and Arab-Americans in airports all across
the country," said Bonior in a March 1999 House floor speech.

Bonior, whose Detroit-area district has a large Muslim population, has
lobbied FAA administrator Jane Garvey, a Clinton appointee, to end
profiling of Muslims and Arabs at U.S. airports.

"I'm angry. This is my religion," said Iklas Musa, one of the EEOC
complainants at the time of the March 1999 filing.

In April, Argenbright agreed to give the women back pay and $2,500 in
compensation, as well as a written apology. In addition, the company
implemented a Muslim-sensitivity program at all its U.S. locations.

Some of the Muslim women, like Rueaia F. Mohammed, didn't think the
settlement went far enough and wanted to make Argenbright apologize on TV.

Ex-FAA inspector Elson says airport-security contractors can't win. On one
hand, the government slams them for hiring foreigners. But if they don't
hire them, or fire them, the government nails them for discrimination.

"The only standard government enforces is making every minority happy and
comfortable and not offending anybody," Elson told WorldNetDaily.

"But the Constitution doesn't say you can't offend anybody, and it doesn't
say we can't discriminate against people if they're a threat to our
security," he added. "When it comes to our survival, I really don't give a
damn about Muslim sensitivities."

Paul Sperry is Washington bureau chief for WorldNetDaily.