Banner Advertiser

Monday, November 14, 2011

[mukto-mona] JAMAT AND US LOBBYING FIRM !!!!!!!!!!



Dear All,

An article to read , an article to circulate to others !!

Respectfully,
Dr. Muhammad Ali Manik
US Awami League.

US lobbying firm under spotlight for Jamaat ties

by David Bergman
 
A major US lobbying company may have broken US criminal law by failing to register itself as a foreign agent of a political party when it acted as a lobbyist for Mir Quasem Ali, a leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami in Bangladesh.
In a five-month period between November 2010 and March 2011, as previously revealed by New Age, the company used four lobbyists, including the firm's founder and chief executive Gerald SJ Cassidy, to lobby on behalf of the Jamaat's central executive committee leader on the issue of the 'Bangladesh War Crimes Tribunal and political opposition matters.'
The contract started in November 2010, three months after four of the party's most senior leaders, including Matiur Rahman Nizami, were arrested in Bangladesh by the International Crimes Tribunal on suspicion of committing international crimes during the 1971 war of independence.
Subsequently, one other leader, Delwar Hossain Sayedee, was arrested on similar suspicions and his trial is due to start later this month. The initial four accused men are due to be formally charged next month.
The Foreign Agent Registration Act 1938 requiresthat any lobbying firm acting on behalf of a foreign political party must register itself with the US Department of Justice within 10 days of agreeing to become 'an agent' of the political party and before performing any duties on its behalf.
'Wilful' violation of the law can result in a maximum fine of $10,000 or a sentence of up to two years' imprisonment.
Tom Alexander, Cassidy and Associate's director of corporate communications, however, told New Age that it did not consider it necessary to register under the act. 'Cassidy & Associates has always maintained a rigorous internal process that includes a thorough review by legal counsel to ensure we follow every law and regulation when it comes to all of our work on our clients' behalf. You would be greatly mistaken to suggest otherwise,' he stated.
The details of the $180,000 (Tk 13.9 million) contractual arrangements between Mir Quasem Ali and Cassidy and Associates, which in 2010 was the sixth largest US lobbying firm, were disclosed in forms filed by the company to comply with the Lobbying Disclosure Act 1995.
However, it is the company's failure to register itself under the Foreign Agent Registration Act 1938 for its dealings with Mir Quasem Ali which is now under question.
Registration would have required Cassidy and Associates to make public much more detailed information about its lobbying than it is required to do under the Lobbying Disclosure Act 1995, including the name of every person it lobbied in the executive and legislative branches of the government, the dates of all the contacts and a summary of the specific matters discussed whilst working on behalf of Quasem Ali.
The company would also have been required to disclose any other efforts it was making to influence the US public at large in favour of its client and to make it clear on any document it distributed that it was acting as a foreign agent.
'The question is whether Mir Quasem Ali sought the lobbying assistance on behalf of the Jamaat-e-Islami, or whether he sought it in an individual capacity,' lawyer Scott Thomas, head of the political law practice at the US law firm Dickenson Shapiro, told New Age.
'If Quasem Ali was in effect acting for the political party, then Cassidy and Associates should have registered itself under the Foreign Agent Registration Act,' he added.
The Department of Justice's own guide to the act states that a lobbying company will be considered to be an agent of a foreign political party if it acts 'at the order, request, or under the direction or control' of the political party or 'of a person any of whose activities are directly or indirectly supervised, directed, controlled, financed, or subsidized in whole or in major part' by the party.
In July this year, the Department of Justice charged two individuals, Syed Ghulam Nabi Faiz and Zaheer Ahmad, with violating the 1938 law by failing to register their political and public relations activities on behalf of the Pakistani government.
The FARA registration unit of the counterespionage section in the National Security Division of the Department of Justice is responsible for the act's enforcement.
'The enforcement bodies would have to look at all the circumstances to see whether the company has breached the law or not. What were the terms of the contract? Did Cassidy and Associates, when it lobbied, continually raise issues about Jamaat-e-Islami? For whom was the lobbying useful? These are the kinds of questions that would need to be asked,' the lawyer and former chairman of the Federal Election Commission told New Age.
He said that it would not be plausible for Cassidy to argue that it was unaware that Mir Quasem Ali was a senior member of the Jamaat.
'It would be impossible to imagine that a firm like Cassidy did not know who he was,' he said.
'Cassidy and Associates would have to show that it is simply a coincidence that Quasem Ali happens to be a political leader of the party, and that he was raising issues about war crimes and political party matters simply as an individual unconnected to his role in the party,' Thomas added.
Another lawyer who spoke to New Age suggested that arrangements with individuals from a foreign country inevitably raise suspicions.
'A relevant question to be asked in situations like this is why a private person from another country would spend large sums of money to change the US government's policy. This kind of scenario does raise suspicions,' said Dan Pickard, a partner of a large Washington-based law firm, Wiley Rein LLP, who advises clients on compliance with FARA.
'It would be easier for an individual person who is a member of a foreign political party to argue that any contract he may have with a lobbying firm is of a personal nature and has nothing to do with the political party if the firm was lobbying on behalf of the clients own business interests. Then the politician can perhaps argue that he or she is getting lobbying not to support the political party but his personal commercial interests,' he added.
According to the database run by the US groups Pro Publica and the Sunlight Foundation, Cassidy and Associates has in the past registered itself as a foreign agent when it worked for the embassy of Pakistan, the Kurdistan regional government and the Republic of Equatorial Guinea.
Similar questions may also be raised about the failure of Cassidy and Associates to register its lobbying on behalf of Mir Masum Ali, the brother of Quasem Ali, under the 1938 Act.
Less than a month after Quasem Ali had terminated his contract with the company at the end of March 2011, Masum Ali made a similar arrangement where the lobby firm was also required to work on exactly the same issues — 'Bangladesh War Crimes Tribunal and political opposition matters.'
So far Mir Masum Ali, who is Mir Quasem Ali's younger brother, has incurred $130,000 (Tk 9.9 million) in fees, with the company allocating to him a very similar team of lobbyists who had previously worked for his brother.
'What is important ultimately is not whose name is on a contract,' said the Washington lawyer, Dan Pickard. 'The question for the Department of Justice is whether the foreign party is directly or indirectly calling the shots. Is the person who signed the contract effectively getting his marching orders from the political party in another country?'
Scott Thomas does, however, raise a matter of caution. 'It is more difficult when you are dealing with individuals or organisations, living or resident in the United States, who campaign for matters to do with their original home country,' he said. 'There is legitimate work that such people do which does not raise issues about FARA. It depends a lot on where the money is coming from and who is directing the lobbying.'
New Age contacted Mir Quasem Ali to ask him whether he was seeking lobbying advice on behalf of the Jamaat-e-Islami but received no response.
When asked by New Age about whether the company should have registered under the Foreign Agent Registration Act in relation to its dealings with both the two brothers, Tom Alexander, director of corporate communications of Cassidy & Associates, gave the following statement.
'Cassidy & Associates follows a strict corporate policy not to discuss our work for clients with media, however, in this case your readers deserve the facts, not reported innuendo or arm chair quarterbacking from sources not directly involved in this matter.
'Our careful decision to file under the Lobbying Disclosure Act is indeed the appropriate step as our client of record is a resident of the United States, not a political party, and our scope of work relates to US policy interests and the protection of an individual's human rights in an emerging democracy.'
When New Age suggested to him that this statement does not appear to respond to question about the company's arrangement with Mir Quasem Ali, who is not a resident of the United States and is a leader of a foreign political party, Alexander said that, 'Our [Lobbying Disclosure Act] filings clearly state client of record and you have our statement.'
 
Source – New Age

Share This Post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
*

*
You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>


__._,_.___


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___