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  • JUAN GONZÁLEZ: As we continue our coverage of Donald Trump’s executive order, were

  • joined by Nisrin Elamin, a Ph.D. student in anthropology at Stanford University and a

  • Sudanese citizen.

  • AMY GOODMAN: She was detained at JFK airport Friday evening, shortly after Donald Trump’s

  • executive order banning visitors from seven countries, including Sudan, went into effect.

  • Welcome to Democracy Now!

  • I’m very sorry for what you went through.

  • Can you describe what happened to you at the airport, Nisrin?

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: Sure.

  • I boarded a plane in Sudan shortly after finding out about the executive order.

  • I was trying to get back before it came into effect, but I missed the connecting flight.

  • When I got in, I was asked to—I was escorted into a separate holding area.

  • I was questioned extensively, in part, among other things, about my views about the political

  • situation in Sudan, about whether or not I knew of radical groups in Sudan, whether I

  • knew people who had radical views.

  • I was asked to share my social media handlesnot my passwords, but my social media handles.

  • Then I was asked to kind of sit tight and wait as they were trying to figure out what

  • was going on, because the order had literally just been signed, soor they were just getting

  • notice of it, so they reallythe officers didn’t really know what they were doing.

  • And they told me, eventually, that I needed to get transferred to Terminal 4, which is

  • a 24-hour holding area.

  • And before doing that, I had to be patted down.

  • And so, I was led into a room.

  • I was patted down.

  • It was a very uncomfortable pat-down.

  • I was touched in my chest and groin area.

  • And then I was handcuffed briefly.

  • That’s when I started to cry, because I felt likeat that moment, I felt like, "OK,

  • I’m probably going to get deported."

  • And they didn’t—they realized they hadn’t handcuffed the other person who was with me,

  • who was an Iranian green card holder, and so they took off the handcuffs, transferred

  • us to Terminal 4.

  • There were other people at this point that were getting led in in handcuffs who were

  • Iranian and Iraqi citizens with valid visas.

  • Eventually, I got out, after five hours.

  • And I was told—I asked the officer if I would be able to go back to Sudan, because

  • I haven’t finished my dissertation research.

  • And he recommended that I not go back, unless I was willing to be subjected to that whole

  • procedure again.

  • And he said, "You know, I would stay put if I were you," because green card holders were

  • being treated on a case-by-case basis.

  • JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And did you get any sensebecause there’s been a lot of reports in terms of

  • the lack of preparation for this order.

  • Did you get any sense that the customs officials and the others that you dealt with, the immigration

  • officials, were on the same wavelength or knew what they were doing, or was there a

  • lot of confusion?

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: There was a lot of confusion.

  • It was very chaotic.

  • And they admitted it to me.

  • It was interesting watching.

  • I feel like when I first got into the holding area, which I was quite familiar with, because

  • when I was an F1 and when I was on a student and work visa, I was often questioned in that

  • room—I never expected to be in there as a green card holder.

  • But, you know, there was a lot of confusion.

  • They didn’t know what to do with us.

  • And in the beginning, I felt like I was being treated quite well.

  • And as the night progressed, I feel like I watched our kind of progressive criminalization,

  • if you will.

  • And that was as people were trying, scrambling to get direction from higher-ups in Washington.

  • AMY GOODMAN: They weren’t used to holding green card holders, right?

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: Exactly.

  • AMY GOODMAN: And so, do you feel you were treated differently as not only an immigrant,

  • but as an African immigrant?

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: You know, it’s an interesting question.

  • I think, on the one hand, I was probably treated much better than other people, partly because

  • of my affiliation with Stanford.

  • AMY GOODMAN: Had Stanford helped you come back as fast as you could

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: Yes.

  • AMY GOODMAN: —once they realized what was happening?

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: Yes.

  • They paid for my ticket.

  • I also, during the interview, told them that I was a Stanford Ph.D. student.

  • AMY GOODMAN: And you were a Harvard undergrad?

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: Yes.

  • So I think that, you know, led to me being detained for five hours, as opposed to another

  • Sudanese person who was detained for 30 hours and is in his seventies.

  • So, I think that that’s one aspect of it.

  • On the flip side, when I went to Terminal 4, they didn’t know my background, and I

  • did feelyou know, I guess the point that I actually want to make is, you know, I think

  • this order is a reflection of a larger trend in this country to criminalize black people,

  • to criminalize immigrants, to criminalize Muslims.

  • And as a black Muslim immigrant, I’m really concerned about that.

  • And I do think that the Somalis and Sudanese, people of African descent who are going to

  • be affected by this, you know, I think theyre going to be treated differently, frankly.

  • AMY GOODMAN: Youve made the point that other terrorists, people like Dylann Storm

  • Roof, who murdered a bunch of innocent civilians, terrorizing a whole populationyouve

  • made a comparison to how communities are treated.

  • NISRIN ELAMIN: Yeah.

  • You know, I think—I guess I want people to realize thatyou know, to imagine a ban

  • on white Christian males from schools and churches, where these kinds of terrorist acts

  • have happened, like the one Dylann Roof committed.

  • You know, that would be nonsensical.

  • And I think this is very similar.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: As we continue our coverage of Donald Trump’s executive order, were

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スーダンのスタンフォード大学の博士課程の学生は、トランプ氏のイスラム教徒の禁止の下でJFKで拘束された後に発言する (Sudanese Stanford Ph.D. Student Speaks Out After Being Detained at JFK Under Trump Muslim Ban)

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    Darren に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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