Iranians report being stopped, facing delays at US border

Iranians burn an Israeli and a US flag during an anti-US protest over the killings during a US air stike of Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani and Iraqi paramilitary chief Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, in the capital Tehran on January 4, 2020.
AFP/Atta Kenare

LOS ANGELES, United States — Dozens of Iranians and Iranian-Americans have reported being harassed or questioned for hours at the US border following heightened tensions over the US killing of Iranian General Qasem Soleimani.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim advocacy group, said it had

provided assistance to

more than 60 travelers who

were detained at length over the weekend and questioned about their political views at Washington state's border with Canada.

Many of them

were reportedly denied entry to the US

due to a lack of capacity for Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) to detain them.

One 24-year-old only identified as Crystal by CAIR said she

was detained and interrogated for

more than 10 hours with her family at the Peace Arch Border Crossing in Blaine, Washington, before being released early Sunday.

She said when the family asked why they were being detained, CBP agents said, "It is just the wrong time for you guys."

"These reports are extremely troubling and potentially

constitute illegal detentions of United States citizens," said Masih

Fouladi, executive director of CAIR's Washington chapter. "We are working to verify reports of a broad nationwide directive to detain Iranian-Americans at ports of entry so

that we can provide community members with

accurate travel guidance." 

However, CBP officials have disputed the reports, saying that long delays at the border were

due to increased traffic because of the holiday season and a shortage of staff to process travelers.

They also insist that the agency does not discriminate based on religion, race or ethnicity.

'Constitutional and moral problems'

"Social media posts that CBP is detaining Iranian-Americans and refusing their entry into the US because of their country of origin are false," CBP spokesman

Michael Friel told AFP.

He added that reports that the Department of Homeland Security and CBP had issued a directive to bar Iranian-Americans from entering the country were also false.

A security official who did not wish to

be identified said that the increased delays Iranian-Americans faced at the border

were related to CBP "operating with an enhanced posture at its ports of entry to safeguard our national security." 

The delays at the border have

been condemned by public officials, with many accusing the Trump administration of overreach.

"Washingtonians who

happen to be Iranian-American

were detained at the Canadian-US border for extended periods of time for no other reason than their ethnicity or country of origin," Washington Governor Jay Inslee said in a statement. 

"This is wrong and rife with constitutional and moral problems," he added. "No one should

be treated differently

due to where they come from, how they look or what language they speak."

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a top Democratic candidate in the US presidential race, said she found the reports "deeply disturbing."

"Iranian Americans have the same rights as all other US citizens and should

be treated with dignity and respect at our border

-- not bigoted, xenophobic scrutiny," she said in a tweet.

The increased scrutiny at the border comes after Iran vowed to avenge Soleimani's killing in a drone strike ordered by US President Donald Trump.

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