The New York Times Company
The New York Times
November 22, 2003, Saturday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section B; Page 3; Column 1; Metropolitan Desk
LENGTH: 797 words
HEADLINE: Muslim SUNY Student's Expulsion Is Protested
BYLINE: By SABRINA TAVERNISE
BODY:
Groups
of legal advocates and students protested the arrest and expulsion of a
State University of New York Maritime College student yesterday,
claiming the college singled out the student, a Muslim from Nigeria,
after he argued with a college official to lower his tuition. The
Bronx-based college denied it had called the authorities, citing
privacy laws that prohibit academic institutions from disclosing
information about their students.
The case
has become a rallying point for immigrant advocacy groups, who say it
is an example of the heightened scrutiny immigrants have received since
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Under federal rules, in
particular a regulation requiring immigrants from 25 countries to
register in a special process with federal authorities, thousands of
immigrants could face deportation.
"This
case exemplifies conditions within schools where administrators are
able to abuse their authority by threatening foreign students," said
Monami Maulik, an immigrant advocate who has taken up the case and led
a rally yesterday outside 26 Federal Plaza in Lower Mahattan.
The
student, Sulaiman Oladokun, 28, has been in a New Jersey jail since
March, when agents from the Joint Terrorism Task Force arrested him in
the college library. About two weeks after his arrest, the college
expelled him. It was two months before he was scheduled to graduate. He
is being held by immigration authorities on charges that he falsified
his Nigerian college records, a charge he denies. Mr. Oladokun's United
States student visa was issued based on his Nigerian academic record,
Ms. Maulik said.
Mr. Oladokun said that a
college vice president, Kimberly Cline, had threatened to call
immigration authorities on him in February, after he had argued with
her over tuition. A copy of his immigration report, drawn up by the
authorities after his arrest and provided by Ms. Maulik, states that
"the school contacted the Joint Terrorism Task Force because of what
they believed to be suspicious behavior of the subject."
The
college, in a statement, said "such allegations are absolutely false."
It added, "We at Maritime College have not demanded or arranged for the
detention of any of our students, nor can we now demand or cause the
release of any student."
Mr. Oladokun, in
a telephone interview from the Bergen County Jail in New Jersey, said
that Ms. Cline "said she'd call the I.N.S. on me." He continued: "I
said, 'That's not logical.' This has nothing to do with the I.N.S. I
didn't know it was a kind of warning."
Laura
Mullen, a college spokeswoman, declined to comment on why Mr. Oladokun
was expelled. Federal privacy laws, the college said, prohibit the
release of certain information about students. Ms. Cline was not at
work on Friday, another college spokesperson said, and was unavailable
for comment.
Whatever the reason for Mr.
Oladokun's problems, his case as an immigrant in danger of facing
deportation has become more common sinceSept. 11, 2001. Advocacy and
civil liberties groups report a rise in arrests and detentions since
the federal government toughened rules that monitor the movements of
immigrants, particularly Muslims. "Special registration, the
questioning of people, secret arrests and detentions have had a
devastating impact," said Lee Gelernt, senior staff counsel at the
American Civil Liberties Union's National Immigrants' Rights Project.
"A lot of hardships were caused by pinning the terrorist tag on people
too quickly."
Under one such rule,
immigrants from 25 countries were required to register with the federal
government. Since the rule was imposed last November, 290,526
immigrants across the country have registered, said Mark Thorn, a
spokesman for New York Immigration and Customs Enforcement, within the
Department of Homeland Security. Of those, about 13,000 face
deportation in court dates to appear before judges.
For
foreign students, a new national rule, the Student and Exchange Visitor
Information System, required academic institutions to begin entering
information on foreign students into a federal database in August of
this year. In New York that has been compounded by local agencies, like
the New York Police Department and the Taxi and Limousine Commission,
that have been working more closely with immigration authorities, said
Sinyen Ling, a staff attorney at the Asian American Legal Defense and
Education Fund, which has been handling litigation for Muslim men in
the New York area.
"What we've been
hearing is an increase of local city agencies that have been involved
in enforcing immigration laws," Ms. Ling said.
"The SUNY student stands out because there's a belief that it was the school that actually reported him," she added.
http://www.nytimes.com
GRAPHIC:
Photo: Immigrants' rights advocates held a news conference yesterday to
protest the treatment of Sulaiman Oladokun, a Nigerian Muslim expelled
from SUNY Maritime College two months before his graduation. (Photo by
Lucian Read/World Picture News for The New York Times)
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