Audrey Hudson
The Washington Times
November 28, 2006
Muslim religious leaders removed from a Minneapolis flight last week
exhibited behavior associated with a security probe by terrorists and
were not merely engaged in prayers, according to witnesses, police
reports and aviation security officials.
Witnesses said three of the imams were praying loudly in the concourse
and repeatedly shouted "Allah" when passengers were called for boarding
US Airways Flight 300 to Phoenix. "I was suspicious by the way
they were praying very loud," the gate agent told the Minneapolis
Police Department.
Passengers and flight attendants told law-enforcement officials the
imams switched from their assigned seats to a pattern associated with
the September 11 terrorist attacks and also found in probes of U.S.
security since the attacks -- two in the front row first-class, two in
the middle of the plane on the exit aisle and two in the rear of the
cabin. "That would alarm me," said a federal air marshal who
asked to remain anonymous. "They now control all of the entry and exit
routes to the plane."
A pilot from another airline said: "That behavior has been identified
as a terrorist probe in the airline industry."
But the imams who were escorted off the flight in handcuffs say they
were merely praying before the 6:30 p.m. flight on Nov. 20, and
yesterday led a protest by prayer with other religious leaders at the
airline's ticket counter at Ronald Reagan Washington National
Airport. Mahdi Bray, executive director of the Muslim
American Society Freedom Foundation, called removing the imams an act
of Islamophobia and compared it to racism against blacks. "It's a
shame that as an African-American and a Muslim I have the double whammy
of having to worry about driving while black and flying while Muslim,"
Mr. Bray said.
The protesters also called on Congress to pass legislation to outlaw
passenger profiling. Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee, Texas Democrat,
said the September 11 terrorist attacks "cannot be permitted to be used
to justify racial profiling, harassment and discrimination of Muslim
and Arab Americans." "Understandably, the imams felt profiled,
humiliated, and discriminated against by their treatment," she said.
According to witnesses, police reports and aviation security officials,
the imams displayed other suspicious behavior. Three of the men
asked for seat-belt extenders, although two flight attendants told
police the men were not oversized. One flight attendant told police she
"found this unsettling, as crew knew about the six passengers on board
and where they were sitting." Rather than attach the extensions, the
men placed the straps and buckles on the cabin floor, the flight
attendant said.
The imams said they were not discussing politics and only spoke in
English, but witnesses told law enforcement that the men spoke in
Arabic and English, criticizing the war in Iraq and President Bush, and
talking about al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden.
The imams who claimed two first-class seats said their tickets were
upgraded. The gate agent told police that when the imams asked to be
upgraded, they were told no such seats were available. Nevertheless,
the two men were seated in first class when removed.
A flight attendant said one of the men made two trips to the rear of
the plane to talk to the imam during boarding, and again when the
flight was delayed because of their behavior. Aviation officials,
including air marshals and pilots, said these actions alone would not
warrant a second look, but the combination is suspicious. "That's
like shouting 'fire' in a crowded theater. You just can't do that
anymore," said Robert MacLean, a former air marshal. "They
should have been denied boarding and been investigated," Mr. MacLean
said. "It looks like they are trying to create public sympathy or maybe
setting someone up for a lawsuit."
The pilot with another airline who talked to The Washington Times on
condition of anonymity, said he would have made the same call as the US
Airways pilot. "If any group of passengers is commingling in the
terminal and didn't sit in their assigned seats or with each other, I
would stop everything and investigate until they could provide me with
a reason they did not sit in their assigned seats."
One of the passengers, Omar Shahin, told Newsweek the group did
everything it could to avoid suspicion by wearing Western clothes,
speaking English and booking seats so they were not together. He said
they conducted prayers quietly and separately to avoid attention.
The imams had attended a conference sponsored by the North American
Imam Federation in Minneapolis and were returning to Phoenix. Mr.
Shahin, who is president of the federation, said on his Web site that
none of the passengers made pro-Saddam or anti-American statements.
The pilot said the airlines are not "secretly prejudiced against any
nationality, religion or culture," and that the only target of
profiling is passenger behavior. "There are certain
behaviors that raise the bar, and not sitting in your assigned seat
raises the bar substantially," the pilot said. "Especially since we
know that this behavior has been evident in suspicious probes in the
past." "Someone at US Airways made a notably good decision," said
a second pilot, who also does not work for US Airways.
A spokeswoman for US Airways declined to discuss the incident. Aviation
security officials said thousands of Muslims fly every day and conduct
prayers in airports in a quiet and private manner without creating
incidents.