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Green Party "Terrorists"
Frederick Sweet, Intervention
Magazine
January 6, 2003
Writing about his no-fly
nightmare in the Fairfield County Weekly, art dealer Doug Stuber, who
had run Ralph Nader's Green Party presidential campaign in North Carolina
in 2000, was pulled out of a boarding line and grounded. He was about
to make an important trip to Prague to gather artists for Henry James
Art in Raleigh, N.C., when he was told (with ticket in hand) that he
was not allowed to fly out that day.
Asking "why not?" he was
told at Raleigh-Durham airport that because of the sniper attacks, no
Greens were allowed to fly overseas on that day. The next morning he
returned, and instead of paying $670 round trip, was forced into a $2,600
"same day" air fare. But it's what happened to Stuber during the next
24 hours that is even more disturbing.
Stuber arrived at the airport
at 6 a.m. and his first flight wasn't due out until nearly six hours
later. He had plenty of time. At exactly 10:52 in the morning, just
before boarding was to begin, he was approached by police officer Stanley
(the same policeman who ushered him out of the airport the day before),
who said that he "wanted to talk" to him. Stuber went with the police
officer, but reminded him that no one had said he couldn't fly, and
that his flight was about to leave.
Officer Stanley took Stuber
into a room and questioned him for an hour. Around noon, Stanley had
introduced him to two Secret Service agents. The agents took full eye-open
pictures of Stuber with a digital camera. Then they asked him details
about his family, where he lived, who he ever knew, what the Greens
are up to, and other questions.
At one point during his interrogation,
Stuber asked if they really believed the Greens were equal to al Qaeda.
Then they showed him a Justice Department document that actually shows
the Greens as likely terrorists -- just as likely as al Qaeda members.
Stuber was released just before 1 PM, so he still had time to catch
the later flight.
The agents walked Stuber
to the Delta counter and asked that he be given tickets for the flight
so that he could make his connections. The airline official promptly
printed tickets, which relieved Stuber, who assumed that the Secret
Service hadn't stopped him from flying. Wrong! By the time Stuber was
about to board, officer Stanley once again ushered him out the door
and told him: "Just go to Greensboro, where they don't know you, and
be totally quiet about politics, and you can make it to Europe that
way."
In Greensboro, after Stuber
showed his passport he was told that he could not fly overseas or domestically.
Undeterred, he next traveled an hour-and-a-half to Charlotte. In Charlotte,
the same thing happened. Then Stuber drove three hours to his home after
43 hours of trying to catch a flight.
Stuber said he could only
conclude that the Greens, whose values include nonviolence, social justice,
etc., are now labeled terrorists by the Ashcroft-led Justice Department.
Questions about how one gets
on a no-fly list creates questions about how to get off it. This is
a classic Catch-22 situation. The Transportation Security Agency says
it compiles the list from names provided by other agencies, but it has
no procedure for correcting a problem. Aggrieved parties would have
to go to the agency that first reported their names. But for security
reasons, the TSA won't disclose which agency put someone on the no-fly
list.
Frederick Sweet is Professor
of Reproductive Biology in Obstetrics and Gynecology at Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis.
©
2004 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
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