Rizwaan Sabir on being suspected of terrorism for researching Al-Qaida

Apparently academic freedom is a thing of the past, if you happen to be a Muslim.

May 14 2008. A postgraduate international relations student at the University of Nottingham and a principle administrator in the modern languages department (also a former postgraduate student at the university), Rizwaan Sabir and Hicham Yezza, were arrested under section 41 of the Terrorism Act 2000. I type this sentence, and despite everything, I still find it difficult to comprehend the arrests. We were detained for six days, unable to see our family or friends on suspicion of being involved in the "commission, preparation, or instigation" of an act of terrorism. Our homes were raided and my terrified family evicted from their home...

After failing to find justification to detain me any longer, on day six of our ordeal, I was released without a charge, without an apology; but with a police warning against accessing an openly available, widely cited al-Qaida document considered relevant to my postgraduate research by me and my academic supervisors.

Read Rizwaans story here. Seriously, I find this concerning. Makes me wonder about the wisdom of graduate school in Islamic studies which I sometimes contemplate. Is googling the wrong keywords going to become something to worry about?