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Dyab Abou Jahjah is the Lebanese-born founder of the Arab European League, an Antwerp-based organisation which claims to speak for Europe’s Muslims. The Arab European League gained a certain notoriety when it weighed into the Motoons debate by publishing a series of anti-Semitic cartoons, ‘testing the limits’ of free expression in Europe.
Abou Jahjah is also, according to this New York Times profile, a former teenage member of Hezbollah, and still apparently a supporter of that organisation, having gone so far as to say he would return to Lebanon to fight with them against Israel in 2006.
Abou Jahjah was in London on Monday 30 March to address a Stop the War Coalition meeting, alongside Hezbollah MP Hussein El-Hajj Hassan, among others. He returned to Belgium after the meeting, with the intention of coming back to London for more meetings on the Friday of that week.
However, when he attempted to enter Britain again, he was prevented from doing so by customs officials, and sent back to Belgium after being detained for six hours.
Naturally, he is not happy about this, and believes the reason he has been barred is a campaign by ‘Zionists’.
In a statement, the Home Office told Index on Censorship:
‘This individual has been barred from entering the UK as we believe he is not conducive to the public good — he has made statements that incite religious hatred and place community harmony at risk.
‘The government supports freedom of expression, but believes it needs to be exercised responsibly. We will continue to oppose extremism in all its forms.
‘That is why we are determined to stop those who try to spread hatred and violent messages in our communities from coming to our country and that was the driving force behind tighter rules on exclusions for unacceptable behaviour that the Home Secretary announced in October last year.
‘EEA nationals can be refused admission to the UK on grounds of public security.’
Which is consistent with the previous reasons for banning Geert Wilders, Fred Phelps, and others. But it is curious that Dyab Abou Jahjah, who has been on the political radar for several years now, seemingly only came to the attention of the Home Office last week.
In the latest article in the libel bind series, a collaboration between Index on Censorship, English PEN and the Guardian, Afua Hirsch, Guardian legal affairs correspondent, examines some unsavoury legal aspects of the UK defamation industry:
‘But there are aspects of the modern libel industry –– and it is an industry –– that capture some of the most unappealing aspects of the English legal system. The entire area of law is dominated by barristers from only two sets of chambers –– 5 Raymond Buildings and 1 Brick Court (and you can believe I will be watching what I say because the thought of defaming either of them is enough to give any journalist writers’ block). The pervasive presence of these sets of chambers can be gleaned from the fact that libel lawyers instruct them, libel barristers belong to them, and libel judges have graduated from them to the bench.‘
Read the rest here
Harry’s Place is reporting that MCB member Daud Abdullah is to sue Hazel Blears MP after she accused him of supporting terrorism in signing the Istanbul Declaration.
The UK government’s retention of this archaic legislation only serves to justify oppression in other countries, writes
Evan Harris
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