Within the last year and a half, the staff of the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has dwindled tremendously. The
latest casualty is that of CAIR-Miami’s Communications Director and Hamas-defender,
Omer Subhani. The causes for the drop-off, including that of scandal, vary as
much as the excuses given.
On November 4th, in an article concerning Omer
Subhani’s refusal to acknowledge Hamas, Hezbollah and the PLO as terrorist
organizations, this author reported that Subhani had recently removed references
to CAIR from his blog. It was a matter of interest, as he was one of the top
staffers out of CAIR-Florida’s main office.
In response
to the article, Subhani had the following to say: “[M]y references to CAIR
on this blog were taken down because I no longer work for CAIR. I have gone
back to school full time since August.” While he may well be telling the truth,
Subhani has followed a current trend, whereby CAIR leaders have abruptly left
the organization.
Ahmed Bedier, also a CAIR-Florida alum – he was
CAIR-Florida’s Communications Director and CAIR-Tampa’s Executive Director – announced
his retirement from the group in May of 2008. According to Bedier, who is
infamous for having said that, prior to 1995, there was “nothing immoral” about
associating with Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), he left CAIR to work on a
“new project.” According to CAIR, he was forced out.
Another former CAIR-Florida rep, Parvez Ahmed, resigned
as CAIR’s National Board Chairman less than two months later, in July of
2008. Ahmed had been only the second Chair since the group began. He stated
that he was tired of CAIR’s “old guard mentality” – a guard that is widely
recognized as having been built from Hamas. CAIR’s National Executive Director
Nihad Awad, CAIR’s National Communications Director Ibrahim Hooper, and Ahmed’s
predecessor Omar Ahmad all had come to CAIR, in 1994, via Hamas’s American
propaganda wing, the Islamic Association for Palestine (IAP). [Ahmed is still
listed as a director of CAIR-Florida’s corporation.]
Arsalan Iftikhar was CAIR’s National Legal Director
until the middle of 2007, when he suddenly abandoned the group. Like many
others within CAIR, when confronted, he has refused to condemn Hamas and
Hezbollah as terrorist organizations.
Unlike the three staffers mentioned previously,
Iftikhar never publicly announced his removal (or self-removal) from CAIR. At
the time of his leaving, he was (and still is) a weekly contributor for
National Public Radio’s (NPR’s) Barbershop
show. On the June 15, 2007 Barbershop
show, he was introduced as “editor and civil rights lawyer Arsalan Iftikhar.”
On the July 6, 2007 show, he was introduced only as “editor Arsalan Iftikhar.”
And on September, 11, 2007, during a guest
commentary for NPR, he was finally introduced as “former representative to
the Council on American Islamic Relations.”
The mystery behind Iftikhar’s abandonment and silence
may very well be found in a federal trial, which began in July of 2007, dealing
with the financing of millions of dollars to Hamas. The defendants were part of
a group associated with CAIR, the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and
Development (HLF), and CAIR, over one month earlier, had been named as a
co-conspirator for the trial. It is possible that Iftikhar got cold feet and no
longer wanted to be linked to terror. He doesn’t even list his involvement with
CAIR within his extensive
bio on his personal website.
Recently, a scandal which took the jobs of at least
two more of CAIR’s top staffers, the Executive Director and the Civil Rights
Manager of CAIR-Maryland/Virginia, was revealed. Those staffers were respectively Khalid Iqbal and
Morris Days.
CAIR-Maryland/Virginia,
originally CAIR-Maryland, was incorporated in March of 2002 using a Bethesda,
Maryland address. One of the first directors of the group was Abdurahman
Alamoudi. The following
year, Alamoudi became part of a Libyan plot to assassinate Saudi Crown Prince
Abdullah and would soon be sentenced to 23 years in prison. While Alamoudi’s
participation in CAIR-MD/VA went unnoticed for many years, recent accusations
of fraud have brought the group into the spotlight, leading to CAIR-MD/VA’s end.
On September 3,
2008, the Mapping Shariah Project (MSP) put out a press
release revealing how CAIR
was “threatening Muslims” with $25,000 penalties, if they were to reveal the
“criminal fraud” that was allegedly being committed by CAIR-MD/VA’s Civil
Rights Manager, Morris Jamil Days. According to MSP, Days was falsely posing as
a civil rights attorney (which CAIR-MD/VA and CAIR National promoted) to
collect money for cases brought to CAIR. This, while Days was never licensed to
practice law, and as such, legal services were never rendered.
As stated in the
MSP release, Days’ job with CAIR was terminated in February of 2008. The public
announcement of this information (concerning the scandal) caused CAIR to close
shop on its Maryland/Virginia chapter, and its Executive Director, Khalid
Iqbal, was forced to go elsewhere, resurfacing as the Deputy Director/Chief
Operating Officer of the All Dulles Area Muslim Society (ADAMS) Center, based
in Herndon, Virginia.
Iqbal, in September
of 2004, sent a personal letter to the CAIR Board of Directors, telling of his
disgust regarding what he called the group’s “employee turnover.” At the time,
he was Director of Operations for CAIR National. He stated that, in 2003, “14
people left CAIR… more than 50% of our workforce.” He gave his reasoning for
it, which included “low employee moral” and “loss of thousands of dollars to
CAIR.”
Is CAIR’s fractured
leadership a symptom of bigger problems within the Islamist group? How many
more scandals have taken place but have gone unreported? And will these things
ultimately result in CAIR’s demise?
If CAIR’s
connections to and defense of terrorist groups do not lead to its downfall,
then maybe CAIR will act to destroy itself.