By Caroline Tarpey,
National Iranian American Council (NIAC)
Washington DC – Iranian
American Georgetown University graduate student, Kambiz Fattahi (GRD '08), filed
suit against the university on April 29 in response to his forced removal from
the university's 2007 commencement ceremony.
Fattahi
claimed his removal from the audience and subsequent detainment was the result
of ethnic profiling. During the ceremony, DPS officers reportedly observed
Fattahi glancing nervously around the audience and searching in his bag. He was
removed from his seat by Sergeant Winfred Walton and Officer Randolph Christian
of the Department of Public Safety, detained, and questioned.
Fattahi
reported that he was targeted because of his Iranian ethnicity and that the DPS
officers made derogatory comments about his Middle Eastern appearance while he
was detained. According to Fattahi, after requesting identification and seeing
Fattahi's business card for the BBC Persian Service one officer stated, "So,
you're from Persia. Aren't Babylon and the Tigris River in Persia?"
"I am
still in shock at how ignorant, arrogant, and unprofessional the guards
were…More shocking and even appalling is how the university has responded to my
complaint," Fattahi commented in an August 2007 issue of the Georgetown
newspaper, The Hoya. In July 2007, an investigation by Georgetown's
Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity and Affirmative Action (IDEAA)
concluded that the DPS officers followed standard procedure and were not guilty
of discriminatory behavior. Fattahi vowed to pursue legal action in response.
On April
25, the university offered a settlement to Fattahi's legal team, which Fattahi
rejected, calling it a "disappointing response" in an April 29 article in
The Hoya. Fattahi filed suit against Georgetown, citing violation of his
constitutional rights as a US citizen. Fattahi told NIAC that he has "gone
forward with the lawsuit because the university has not been forthcoming.
Georgetown has condoned both ethnic profiling and unprofessional behavior by the
DPS."
"I am
also concerned that the IDEAA may be suppressing other similar complaints of
discrimination or bias on campus," Fattahi elaborated. By proceeding with the
legal case, Fattahi hopes to force transparency and ensure a commitment by
Georgetown to uphold its prohibition of racial and ethnic profiling on campus in
the future.
Georgetown's IDEAA could not be reached for comment Tuesday.
Ten bias-related incidents
were reported at Georgetown in fall 2007.
Related Article:
Does US insecurity put
liberty at risk?
The BBC Persian Service's Kambiz Fattahi recounts his own experience of
being singled out on the basis of his appearance and asks whether fears of
terrorism are undermining America's traditional values.
... Payvand News - 05/15/08 ...
© Copyright 2008 NetNative
(All Rights Reserved)
|
|
#