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Muslim immigrants sue CIS for delays in citizenship process

May 23, 2008

Babita Persaud - The Orlando Sentinel
Issue date: 5/22/08 Section: Real News
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ORLANDO, Fla. _ For three years and three months, Ali Hussain has waited to become a U.S. Citizen.

On Thursday, his wait was over _ but not before he sued the federal government.

In February, Hussain and 24 other Muslims joined a statewide lawsuit against Citizenship and Immigration Services and the FBI for what they called unusually lengthy delays in processing their citizenship applications. Some waited as long as five years.

"The lawsuit helped my application. I have been waiting so long," said Hussain, an Orlando machinist from Iraq.

In a post Sept. 11 era of fingerprinting and thorough background checks, legal action is also becoming part of the naturalization process, say some area attorneys.

"These lawsuits bring attention to the government that (processing delays) is a big problem," said Shahzad Ahmed, an Orlando attorney who represents several Muslim clients.

Of the seven Central Florida plaintiffs in the statewide lawsuit, five have since become U.S. Citizens.

Four plaintiffs were sworn in as citizens Thursday at the Orange County Convention Center, including Hussain and his brother, Aso Hussain, a graphic art student at Valencia Community College.

"We are so happy for this day," said Aso Hussain, 25, waving a miniature American flag and citizenship certificate.

Nationally, lawsuits against the immigration agency are becoming more common, especially in places with large Muslim populations. Central Florida has an estimated 40,000 followers of Islam.

"The lawsuits say: Listen this is ridiculous and prejudicial," said Lisa Krueger Khan, Orlando liaison for the American Immigration Lawyer Association Central Florida chapter. "They force the FBI to finish the background check and immigration to act."

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the federal agency that processes citizenship applications, does not comment on pending lawsuits, but Ana Santiago, an agency spokesperson in Miami, said the delays are not targeted toward any one group of people.
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