McLEAN, Virginia, June 3, (AP): The words hit Aziz Nouhaili like a punch to the gut: After the US Embassy in Kuwait confiscated his passport, an official told him he should no longer consider himself as a US citizen.
Nouhaili, a naturalized US citizen from Morocco, has been trying for nearly four months to get home from Kuwait, where he worked for several years as a military contractor. So far, US officials have continued to keep him in Kuwait while they consider revoking his citizenship over a decades-old passport problem.“Being a US citizen is a beautiful thing. It’s something I’m not planning to give up that easily,” Nouhaili, 47, said in a phone interview Thursday.
On Thursday, Nouhaili’s lawyer with the Council on American-Islamic Relations wrote a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton requesting that Nouhaili be given his passport so he can return home. Kuwaiti officials have made clear they will allow Nouhaili to leave only if he has a valid US passport.“American citizenship is too important to be subject to the whims of low level bureaucrats,” the lawyer Gadeir Abbas, wrote. “If there are any concerns about my client’s citizenship, he has the right to have those concerns addressed through the judicial process once he returns to the United States.”The State Department on Thursday referred calls to its Bureau of Consular Affairs, where an official said she could not discuss the case because of privacy concerns. Calls and e-mails to the Department of Homeland Security, which is investigating Nouhaili’s citizenship, were not returned.
The hitch appears to be a passport problem that Nouhaili had more than two decades ago, before becoming a citizen. Nouhaili admits he provided false information to try and obtain a passport. But he cooperated with an investigation and was never charged.
He became a US citizen in 1999 after marrying a citizen. He lived in New York and later in Eugene, Oregon, until 2004 when he took the job in Kuwait. He planned to return home earlier this year and start a new job in Las Vegas. His wife and youngest daughter, who were with him in Kuwait, were allowed to return to the US and did so. They are now in Tunisia, where the wife has family.
Nouhaili said he talks with his family daily on Skype.
“She doesn’t understand what’s going on,” he said of his 8-year-old daughter. “She says, ‘Why aren’t you here?’”
CAIR officials have frequently intervened in cases where American Muslims have been stuck overseas. Most often, Abbas said, the cases revolve around placement on the no-fly list, which is not an issue in Nouhaili’s case.
In 2007, CAIR helped bring a toddler to the US who had been stuck for two years in Morocco. He was unable to board a flight because his name, Ahmedyassine, was similar to the founder of Hamas.More recently, they helped secure the return of two young men from Virginia, Yahya Wehelie and Gulet Mohamed, whose separate travels to Yemen drew scrutiny from the FBI and landed them on the no-fly list. In Mohamed’s case, US officials quickly made arrangements for Mohamed to return to the US That was after a judge said at an emergency hearing that Mohamed’s inability to return to the US appeared to be a clear violation of his rights.
Mohamed, like Nouhaili, was stuck in Kuwait. In Nouhaili’s case, though, there is no indication authorities have any concerns about radicalism or terrorism. Nouhaili has worked without incident for several years for a military contractor in Kuwait, and Nouhaili said he has not been questioned about anything other than the passport.
Still, Abbas said he doubted Nouhaili would be having these problems if he weren’t a Muslim.“We don’t have any definitive evidence, but I doubt the embassy would be taking such drastic actions if he were of a different faith,” Abbas said.
Incidents such as these affect the whole Muslim community, Abbas said, because Muslims worry they could easily fall into a bureaucratic abyss.
Abbas said he intends to file a federal lawsuit if the State Department continues to refuse to let Nouhaili travel.
Nouhaili, meanwhile, continues to wait. He is living with a friend to save money, unable to work in a city he said is notoriously expensive.“I’ve pleaded with them,” he said of his discussions with the embassy. “I cannot stay here. It’s crazy to be here without a job. … I said, ‘anything you want me to do, I’ll do. Just get me out of here.’”
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