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Obama administration ending program once used to track mostly Arab and Muslim men

President Barack Obama’s administration said Thursday it was ending a dormant program that once was used to track mostly Arab and Muslim men. “The D...
Obama first news conference since U.S. election

President Barack Obama’s administration said Thursday it was ending a dormant program that once was used to track mostly Arab and Muslim men.

“The Department of Homeland Security is removing outdated regulations pertaining to the National Security Entry-Exit Registration Systems (NSEERS) program, with an immediate effective date,” said Neema Hakim, a department spokesman.

The Obama administration halted use of the program in 2011. Hakim said the “intervening years have shown that NSEERS is not only obsolete, but that its use would divert limited personnel and resources from more effective measures.”

The New York Times first reported the story.

President-elect Donald Trump has suggested instituting a program that would track Muslim immigrants to the United States.

New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman on Wednesday called on Obama to dismantle the NSEERS program.

In a letter addressed to the President, Schneiderman wrote that NSEERS, created after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks, did not reduce terrorist activity and instead “undermined trust” in law enforcement and instilled fear in some communities.

“We can’t risk giving President-elect Trump the tools to create an unconstitutional religious registry,” Schneiderman said in a separate statement.

Last month, nearly 200 organizations concerned that the incoming President may revive NSEERS asked Obama to abolish the program before he leaves office.

NSEERS, sometimes called “Special Registration,” was a program for registering and monitoring noncitizen visa holders — such as students, workers and tourists — that President George W. Bush’s administration enacted a year after the 9/11 attacks.

The program affected males 16 or older from 25 countries. With the exception of North Korea, all the countries on the list were Arab or had majority Muslim populations.

Proponents of NSEERS said it was necessary to identify and capture terrorists who might enter the country on false pretenses or who were already living in the United States.

Critics said it disproportionately targeted Arabs and Muslims, caused widespread fear within those communities and needlessly punished immigrants.

The program targeted men “regardless of whether they were suspected or accused of any wrongdoing,” Schneiderman’s statement said.

By 2011, nearly a decade after the program was enacted, NSEERS had not resulted in a single terrorism conviction. The Department of Homeland Security determined in 2011 that the program was “redundant and did not provide any increase in security,” said Hakim.

The Obama administration suspended the program by taking all 25 countries off its list, but left its primary structure intact.

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