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Wednesday, 31 August 2011

US Muslims find Themselves the victim of Monitoring and Abuse


WASHINGTON : In a new poll carried out by Pew Research Center in US most of the Muslim-Americans say government antiterrorism policies single them out for increased surveillance and monitoring, and many report increased cases of name-calling, threats, and harassment by airport security, law enforcement officers and others.

More than 52 percent of Muslim-Americans surveyed said their group is singled out by government for terrorist surveillance. Almost as many - 43 percent - reported they had experienced harassment in the past year, according to the poll released yesterday. That share of people reporting harassment is up from 40 percent in 2007, the first time Pew polled Muslim-Americans.

When asked to identify in what ways they felt bias, about 28 percent said they had been treated or viewed with suspicion, while 22 percent said they were called offensive names. About 21 percent said they were singled out by airport security, while another 13 percent said they were targeted by other law enforcement officials. Roughly 6 percent said they had been physically threatened or attacked.

On the other hand, the share of Muslim-Americans who view US policies as “sincere’’ efforts to reduce international terrorism now surpasses those who view them as insincere - 43 percent to 41 percent. Four years ago, during the presidency of George W. Bush, far more viewed US anti-terrorism efforts as insincere - 55 percent to 26 percent.

The vast majority of Muslim-Americans - 79 percent - rate their communities as either “excellent’’ or “good’’ places to live, even among many who reported an act of vandalism against a mosque or a controversy over the building of an Islamic center in their neighborhoods.

They also are more likely to say they are satisfied with the direction of the country - 56 percent, up from 38 percent in 2007. That is in contrast to the general public, whose satisfaction has dropped to 23 percent.

Andrew Kohut, Pew president, said in an interview that Muslim-Americans’ overall level of satisfaction was striking.

“I was concerned about a bigger sense of alienation, but there was not,’’ Kohut said, contrasting the United States to many places in Europe where Muslims have become more separatist. “You don’t see any indication of brewing negativity. When you look at their attitudes, these are still middle-class, mainstream people who want to be loyal to America.’’

Tensions escalated last summer over plans to build an Islamic center near the Ground Zero site in New York City after critics assailed it as an insult to the victims of the 9/11 attacks. Representative Peter King, Republican of New York, held House hearings earlier this year to examine whether American Muslims are becoming “radicalized’’ to attack the United States.

The Associated Press reported last week that with CIA guidance, the New York Police Department dispatched undercover officers into minority neighborhoods, scrutinized imams, and gathered intelligence on cab drivers and food cart vendors, jobs often done by Muslims.

Still, one factor behind the somewhat upbeat sentiment of Muslim-Americans is the 2008 election of Obama, who pledged to improve relations with the Muslim world. Muslim-Americans who vote largely identify themselves as Democrats, and fully 76 percent say they approve of Obama’s job performance.

The 2.75 million Muslim-Americans make up about one percent of the US population.

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