美国移民海关总署拘留密尔沃基伊斯兰协会主席萨拉赫·萨苏尔


2026-04-02 20:40:43 UTC / 路透社

作者:卡尼什卡·辛格

2026年4月2日 晚上8:40 UTC 更新于32分钟前

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2025年8月26日,美国得克萨斯州阿灵顿,一名移民海关总署(ICE)雇员的 polo 衫上绣有该机构徽章。路透社/谢尔比·陶贝尔/资料照片

  • 内容摘要
  • 特朗普打击亲巴勒斯坦声音
  • 清真寺主席周一被移民海关总署拘留
  • 清真寺称他为美国合法永久居民

华盛顿4月2日路透电 —— 密尔沃基伊斯兰协会(ISM)周四表示,该协会主席、巴勒斯坦裔美国人萨拉赫·萨苏尔已被美国移民和海关执法局拘留。

作为威斯康星州规模最大的清真寺的密尔沃基伊斯兰协会称,现年53岁的萨苏尔是合法永久居民,已在美国生活了30多年,于周一被拘留。他在以色列占领的约旦河西岸长大。

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“他在驾车时被十余名移民海关总署特工拦下,毫无合理理由,”该清真寺官网的一篇页面写道,并补充称他被带离该州,先被关押在芝加哥的一所拘留设施,随后被转移到印第安纳州的一所拘留中心。

《密尔沃基哨兵报》援引该清真寺执行董事奥斯曼·阿塔的话报道称,驱逐文件围绕萨苏尔年轻时在约旦河西岸时被以色列当局逮捕一事,声称他为极端分子提供了物质支持。

据《密尔沃基哨兵报》报道,阿塔称萨苏尔年轻时在以色列军事法庭被定罪。尽管以色列已批准联合国反酷刑公约,但以色列人权组织B’Tselem指出,约旦河西岸针对巴勒斯坦嫌疑人的军事法庭定罪率高达96%,且存在通过酷刑逼供的历史。

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阿塔否认萨苏尔支持激进组织哈马斯。

该清真寺表示,萨苏尔“因他的巴勒斯坦和穆斯林背景,以及他为巴勒斯坦权利所做的倡导而成为目标”。

隶属于移民海关总署的美国国土安全部证实了对他的逮捕,并指控萨苏尔在移民表格上撒谎,还称他“涉嫌资助恐怖组织”。

国土安全部称他于1993年来到美国。提及他过往的定罪记录时,该部门表示他此前曾“因向以色列武装人员的住宅投掷燃烧弹被定罪”。

唐纳德·特朗普总统的政府推行了移民打击行动,人权团体谴责此举违反正当程序和言论自由。倡导团体称,这为少数族裔制造了不安全的环境。

特朗普尤其针对亲巴勒斯坦声音采取打击行动,试图驱逐外国抗议者、威胁冻结举办抗议活动的大学的资金,并下令审查移民的在线评论。

此次打击行动遭遇了司法阻力。许多被列为驱逐目标的抗议者在案件审理期间已通过法院命令获释。法官还阻止了特朗普冻结部分大学资金的部分尝试。

特朗普称抗议者是反犹太主义者并支持极端分子。包括一些犹太团体在内的示威者表示,他错误地将对以色列袭击加沙的批评与反犹太主义混为一谈,将倡导巴勒斯坦权利等同于支持极端主义。

卡尼什卡·辛格在华盛顿报道;奥罗拉·埃利斯编辑

US ICE detains Islamic Society of Milwaukee President Salah Sarsour

2026-04-02 20:40:43 UTC / Reuters

By Kanishka Singh

April 2, 2026 8:40 PM UTC Updated 32 mins ago

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The badge of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is embroidered on a polo shirt of an ICE employee in Arlington, Texas, U.S. August 26, 2025. REUTERS/Shelby Tauber/File Photo

  • Summary
  • Trump has cracked down on pro-Palestinian voices
  • Mosque’s president was detained by ICE on Monday
  • Mosque says he was legal permanent resident in US

WASHINGTON, April 2 (Reuters) – Islamic Society of Milwaukee President Salah Sarsour, who is ​a Palestinian American, has been detained by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, the ‌mosque said on Thursday.

ISM, which is Wisconsin’s largest mosque, said Sarsour, 53, is a legal permanent resident who has lived in the U.S. for over three decades and was detained on Monday. He grew up in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

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“He was pulled over ​while driving by over 10 ICE agents with no cause,” a page on the mosque’s website said, ​adding he was taken out of the state to a detention facility in Chicago before ⁠being transferred to a detention center in Indiana.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel cited Othman Atta, the executive director of ​the mosque, as saying that deportation documents focused on Sarsour’s arrest by Israeli authorities as a teenager living in ​the West Bank to argue he provided material support for extremists.

Atta said Sarsour was convicted as a teenager in an Israeli military court, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Though Israel has ratified the U.N. convention against torture, Israeli rights group B’Tselem says military ​courts in the West Bank, where Palestinians are tried for alleged crimes, have a 96 percent conviction rate ​and a history of extracting confessions through torture.

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Atta denied that Sarsour supported the militant group Hamas.

Sarsour is “being targeted on the basis ‌of his ⁠Palestinian and Muslim background, and his advocacy for Palestinian rights,” the mosque said.

The Department of Homeland Security, of which ICE is a part, confirmed his arrest and accused Sarsour of lying on his immigration forms and alleged that he was “suspected of funding terror organizations.”

DHS said he came to the U.S. in 1993. Noting his past conviction, it ​said he was previously “convicted ​for throwing Molotov cocktails at ⁠the homes of Israeli armed forces.”

President Donald Trump’s administration has pursued an immigration crackdown condemned by rights groups as being in violation of due process and free speech. Advocacy groups ​say it has created an unsafe environment for minorities.

Trump has particularly cracked down on ​pro-Palestinian voices by attempting ⁠to deport foreign protesters, threatening funding freeze for universities where protests were held and ordering screening of immigrants’ online comments.

The crackdown has faced judicial obstacles. Many of the protesters targeted for deportation have been freed from detention by court orders while ⁠their cases ​proceed. Judges have also blocked some of Trump’s attempts to freeze ​funds for universities.

Trump alleges protesters are antisemitic and support extremists. Demonstrators, including some Jewish groups, say he wrongly conflates criticism of Israel’s assault on Gaza ​with antisemitism and advocacy for Palestinian rights as supporting extremism.

Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Aurora Ellis

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