| Delivering Aid to Terrorists a "City Purpose" in New York? |
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| Written by IPT News |
| Friday, 09 October 2009 18:21 |
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Barron (D-Brooklyn) sought advice from the city's Conflict of Interest Board (COIB) prior to his trip: Is it permissible for the group to pay for his travel expenses? A COIB attorney said it "appears that the trip will serve a City purpose," based on the representation Barron offered - that the visit to Gaza would involve delivering relief and medical supplies and meeting "with leaders of charitable organizations, schoolteachers, students, heads of refugee camps, patients and nurses."
New York is America's ultimate melting pot, with sizeable constituencies from all over the world. When a New York City official visits Ireland or Italy, it historically has been viewed as spreading goodwill for New York and thus, serving the city. But it's doubtful those trips involved meetings with leaders of terrorist organizations. Charles Barron's trip to Gaza, along with two of his staff members, was paid by Viva Palestina, a group launched by British Member of Parliament George Galloway who has twice led convoys to Gaza that culminated in meetings with, and delivery of more than $2 million in the form of cash and supplies directly to Hamas officials. The cost of each person's travel was estimated at $2,400. The United States has designated Hamas a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) and outlawed providing support to it. Last November, a federal jury in Dallas convicted five former officials of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development of violating that and other laws like it. Barron came to lead the convoy, which left the United States in July, after Galloway passed him the baton upon reaching Gaza, as noted in an account provided by convoy participant Hector Carreon. According to Carreon's report, Galloway called Barron "one of the most important new and rising voices in the Democratic Party of Barack Obama, the City Councilman of New York City to whom I now hand over formally the leadership the American Viva Palestina convoy, Councilman Charles Barron." Upon their arrival in Gaza, both Galloway and Barron knelt down in a Muslim prayer position. Barron did not respond to calls seeking comment. The Investigative Project on Terrorism has been unable to obtain the letter Barron sent to the COIB detailing what he expected to happen on the trip. However, the response obtained from a COIB attorney includes a summary of Barron's representations - making no mention of meetings with Hamas officials. A COIB attorney said board staffers are not allowed to comment on their communication with city officials. The letter from Associate Counsel Karrie Ann Sheridan also contains two caveats that the advice regarding the trip was only as good as the information Barron provided:
Barron, a former Black Panther, spoke at a Viva Palestina rally at a Brooklyn church on July 3, 2009, a day before the Viva Palestina convoy left for the Middle East. There, he declared: "I am not a politician. I am an elected revolutionary" and acknowledged members of the new Black Panther Party in attendance. In his remarks, Barron criticized the White House for not speaking up when Israel intercepted a boat carrying former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney for entering restricted waters off the coast of Gaza. Barron called the Israeli action "piracy," and slammed President Barack Obama for keeping quiet about McKinney's detention after authorizing lethal force against Somali pirates who had kidnapped and threatened to kill an American ship captain (note - some of Barron's comments were difficult to hear over the crowd's enthusiastic response):
At that same event where Barron spoke, Lamis Deek, an attorney and co-chairperson of the Al-Awda Palestine Right to Return Coalition, made it clear the group supports Hamas and advocates the destruction of the State of Israel:
The convoys collect money and relief supplies, she said, but the organization does so to serve a political objective on behalf of the Palestinians:
In speeches, Viva Palestina activists spare Hamas any blame for creating the economic and humanitarian needs in Gaza. In all the rallies, no one called on Hamas to cease firing rockets into Israeli civilian centers, to abandon terrorism or to negotiate peace. John Parker of the International Action Center in California asked rhetorically what Hamas had done wrong:
Barron heard all of this, but did not reflect the political nature of the undertaking when he advised New York City ethics attorneys about his pending trip. According to the City's letter in response to Barron's request, he had indicated he planned to be out of the city from July 9th through the 17th, along with his Chief of Staff Nayo Joy Simmons, while staffer Lamont Carolina was leaving with the convoy on July 4th. It isn't clear whether the aides used vacation time or were paid as if on duty, given the unofficial opinion that their trip could serve a city purpose. In an interview with rapper Marcel Cartier after the convoy returned, Barron lamented that Arabs lacked unity, creating a situation where:
Barron also explained his reasons for joining the convoy:
During the same interview, Barron praised the participation of rapper Mutulu Olugabala (aka M-1) in the convoy:
Despite Barron's role in providing material and moral support to a U.S. designated terrorist organization, Barron drew five challengers in the recent Democratic primary in his attempt to be elected for his fifth term, but easily cast them aside, winning 58 percent of the vote. To read more about the Viva Palestina USA effort, see the IPT's report here. ------------------------- The Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT) is a non-profit research group founded by Steven Emerson in 1995. It is recognized as the world's most comprehensive data center on radical Islamic terrorist groups. For more than a decade, the IPT has investigated the operations, funding, activities and front groups of Islamic terrorist and extremist groups in the United States and around the world. It has become a principal source of critical evidence to a wide variety of government offices and law enforcement agencies, as well as the U.S. Congress and numerous public policy forums. Research carried out by the IPT team has formed the basis for thousands of articles and television specials on the subject of radical Islamic involvement in terrorism, and has even led to successful government action against terrorists and financiers based in the United States.
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