ITTA BENA, MISSISSIPPI - Martin Luther King III said Friday a major casualty in the war on terrorism has been a congressional push to address racial profiling. <br>
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``We almost had the legislation on the books, and then Sept. 11 came,'' King said at Mississippi Valley State University. ``So now we're back on the bottom of the books.'' <br>
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Instead of passing measures to protect minorities, Congress has made it easier for the government to persecute them, he said. <br>
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``They're just locking up folks - 3,500 people - because they're not from here. We have to fight to preserve our civil liberties because they're being eroded everyday under the auspices of national security,'' said King, son of the late Martin Luther King Jr. <br>
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The younger King said while there has been some progress in racial reconciliation, the struggle of his father continues. <br>
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``For the vast majority of people of color, we haven't arrived yet,'' said King, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the civil rights organization his father formed in 1957. <br>
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King was on hand for a scholarship and awards banquet celebrating the 52nd anniversary of Mississippi Valley State, one of three historically black universities in Mississippi.
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