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3 Muslim-Owned Gas Stations Torched in Texas

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Times Staff Writer

Three Muslim-owned gas stations in San Antonio have been set on fire by an arsonist in the last three weeks, raising the specter of hate crimes in a city that prides itself on its diversity.

“No one has taken responsibility and it’s difficult to say what the motive is, but there are too many similarities between the fires for it to be a coincidence,” said Capt. Art Villarreal, head of the arson unit at the San Antonio Police Department. “It flies in the face of logic to say these are random attacks.”

For the 12,000 Muslims who live in San Antonio, the fires are a reminder that fallout from the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks continues. “The police aren’t saying ‘hate crime’ yet, but we as a community are thinking it is because of what we’ve been going through, of being singled out,” said Sarwat Husain, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in San Antonio. “Our community needs to send a clear message to the perpetrators that bigotry and hatred will not be tolerated.”

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The first fire was set March 24 at a Texaco station on San Antonio’s northwest side. Five days later, a nearby combination convenience store and gas station was torched. On Monday, a third station, in the south part of the city, went up in flames. No injuries were reported in the fires.

All were set around 3 a.m. In each case, an accelerant was poured on an outside wall and ignited, causing between $50,000 and $100,000 worth of damage, Villarreal said. In at least two of the cases, investigators found red plastic gasoline containers among the charred rubble.

No anti-Muslim graffiti or notes were left behind, Villarreal said. “It would be difficult to say the perpetrator knew who the owner was in all instances,” he added. “I think he would see the people working behind the counter were from the Middle East and that may have spurred the individual.”

The gas stations, each affiliated with a different corporate brand, were owned and operated by husband-and-wife teams striving to achieve the American dream, Husain said. “They all worked so hard for their businesses, and now it’s gone.... There is shock and anger and fear when you go through something like this. The Muslims here are all Americans. Americans hurting Americans -- this should not be allowed in this country that tells the world it is the most civilized,” she said.

In San Antonio, where 62% of the population is Latino, diversity is typically celebrated, Husain added. “We’re taking it so seriously because this is the first time something like this has happened here, and we want to stop it before it spreads.”

The San Antonio fires follow an incident last month in Lubbock, in west Texas, where vandals shattered windows and sprayed anti-Muslim graffiti on the walls of the Islamic Center of the South Plains.

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Four boys ranging in age from 13 to 15 were arrested and charged with burglary in the theft of cash and equipment from the mosque.

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