Jailed preacher of hate in court battle to stay in Britain
This problem is easy to solve - any "immigrant" worthy of deportation gets their whole family deported with them - and they are all forbidden to ever return. Problem solved.
It'll work on Mexicans too, I'll bet.
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by JAMES SLACK - More by this author 12th April 2007
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Sheikh Abdullah El-Faisal urged followers to kill Jews, Hindus and Americans
A hate preacher blamed for indoctrinating one of the July 7 bombers is using human rights law to fight deportation from Britain, it emerged today.
Sheikh Abdullah El-Faisal - a Jamaican-born Muslim convert who urged followers to kill Jews, Hindus and Americans - is due to be freed from prison within weeks after serving two thirds of a seven-year sentence for inciting murder.
The Home Office has begun legal moves to deport the fanatic, who Ministers say is a continuing threat to national security.
Its official report of the July 7 attacks described El Faisal as a "strong influence" on Jermaine Lindsay, who detonated the Russell Square tube bomb that killed 26 people.
But El Faisal, a twice-married father of four, has lodged an appeal on the grounds that deportation would be a breach of his human right to a family life.
He has already lost one hearing, but is now dragging the case to the High Court in the latest setback to Tony Blair's promise to boot out preachers of hate.
Comments (19)
Sheikh Abdullah El-Faisal urged followers to kill Jews, Hindus and Americans
A hate preacher blamed for indoctrinating one of the July 7 bombers is using human rights law to fight deportation from Britain, it emerged today.
Sheikh Abdullah El-Faisal - a Jamaican-born Muslim convert who urged followers to kill Jews, Hindus and Americans - is due to be freed from prison within weeks after serving two thirds of a seven-year sentence for inciting murder.
The Home Office has begun legal moves to deport the fanatic, who Ministers say is a continuing threat to national security.
Its official report of the July 7 attacks described El Faisal as a "strong influence" on Jermaine Lindsay, who detonated the Russell Square tube bomb that killed 26 people.
But El Faisal, a twice-married father of four, has lodged an appeal on the grounds that deportation would be a breach of his human right to a family life.
He has already lost one hearing, but is now dragging the case to the High Court in the latest setback to Tony Blair's promise to boot out preachers of hate.
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