The great and powerful US is afraid of little old Irish ladies...they must
have heard about my mom.
WHAT NEXT GEN. ASHCROFT? Irish activist and former Member of Parliament,
Bernadette Devlin McAliskey was detained by immigration officials in
Chicago, February 21, and denied entry into the United States allegedly on
"national security" grounds. According to her daughter, Deidre, two INS
officers threatened to arrest, jail, and even shoot the legendary civil
rights campaigner when she arrived at Chicago's O'Hare airport. McAliskey
(56) was then photographed, finger-printed and returned to Ireland against
her will on the grounds that the State Department had declared that she
"poses a serious threat to the security of the United States."
"I'm a 55-year-old granny with a gammy leg after years of to'ins and
fro'ins, and I'm here on a cheap holiday in New York, Bernadette Devlin
McAliskey was saying yesterday. "We were going for our luggage. We were in
Chicago. The cheap flight takes you to New York that way. We didn't have to
go through immigration, they pass you through in Dublin now. The
loudspeaker calls out 'McAliskey.' We go up to your man and say yes, and
we're immediately surrounded by three men and a woman. They grab the
passports out of our hands. One of the men says to me, "We've a fax from
our agents in Dublin. It says you're a potential or real threat to the
United States.'" She told them to look at the name on the passport, which
says Bernadette Devlin McAliskey. "I've been coming back and forth to this
country for 30 years," she told them.
"You've evaded us before, but you're not going to do it now," one of the
immigration people, the oldest one, said.
"Look at the passport. Read the name. I was a member of Parliament."
"What year?"
"Nineteen sixty nine."
"That made you 21 years old," one of them said. "Come on."
She remembered that she said, "This is crazy."
The older agent said, "If you tell me one more time that this is crazy,
I'll put handcuffs on you and throw you into a cell."
"All right, I won't say one more time that this is crazy. But it is crazy,"
she said.
"I'm going to throw you in prison," the older man said.
He tried the wrong party. "You can't do that," she said. "I have rights. I
have the right to free movement. I have human rights. I have the right to
be protected under the Constitution of the United States."
Her daughter overheard one of them say, "After 9/11, nobody has any rights."
Bernadette was told she was being refused entry because she was illegally
using the "Visa Waiver" form knowing she was ineligible because of her
conviction for rioting in 1969. When she pointed out that she had been
using the Visa Waiver since 1989 on the advice of the US Consulate given
that the conviction was "spent" after 20 years and had visited the US
literally dozens of times without any problem the senior INS officer J.E
Squires said " if you contradict me I will slap the cuffs on you and haul
your ass off to jail"
In a particularly bizarre moment McAliskey, 56, was approached by a junior
officer who sat face to face with her and said "Don't piss my boss off. I
saw him fire a shot at a Russian in here last week. It went past my ear. He
has the authority to do that".
McAliskey says she is now in the process of making a formal complaint
through the US consulate in Belfast and the Department of Foreign Affair in
Dublin about what she considers a violation of her right to freedom of
movement and her personal security given the finger printing, photographing
and threat by the junior INS officer. McAliskey said her detention and
expulsion from the US was symptomatic of George Bush's abuse of authority
and of the total lack of due process under the guise of national security
in their headlong rush to war with Iraq.
The McAliskeys, who have a long history fighting government repression on
both sides of the Atlantic, are concerned about the denial of all visitors'
rights. Perhaps, says Deirdre, they are a position to raise a ruckus that
other people can't. "However INS is required to deal with things, and
whatever their protocol may be, it is not part of their legal procedures
that you should be threatened with jail and threatened with being shot,"
says Deirdre. At this point, she is urging visitors to the US to think
twice, "if the state this jumpy, I'd not advise anyone to come here unless
absolutely necessary," she says.
A tireless advocate for the Irish nationalist cause, at the age of 21,
McAliskey was the youngest person ever to be elected to the British
parliament. A witness to the deaths of 13 civilians shot dead by British
paratroopers during a civil rights march in Derry, Northern Ireland in
1972, McAliskey narrowly avoided death a second time when she and her
husband were shot in their home by a loyalist death-squad in 1981. Sources:
Interactivist, Newsday, Irish American Unity Conference
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http://www.infoshop.org/inews/stories.php?story=03/02/24/4747766
