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Europe
In New Admin Error, Germany Expels Uighur Man to China
2018-08-07
[AnNahar] German authorities wrongfully deported an Uighur man to China due to an administrative error, local media reported Monday, in a fresh scandal as the country seeks to step up expulsions of failed asylum seekers.

Officials were due to hold a hearing with the 22-year-old Uighur, who was not named, on April 3 over his asylum application, said regional public broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR).

But a fax announcing the hearing from the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) apparently failed to reach local authorities in Bavaria, who, in the early hours of April 3, put the Uighur man on a plane to Beijing.

"We were unable to find the fax despite an intensive search," Munich authorities told BR.

"We regret greatly that the deportation took place even though a valid asylum application had been made. It was never the intention of the immigration authorities of Munich to infringe on the rights of the foreigner affected by the expulsion."

The BAMF would not give details on individual cases but told the broadcaster that expulsion would be "inadmissible" under such circumstances.

The Uighur asylum seeker's lawyer Leo Borgmann said he has had no news from his client since the deportation.

"There is no sign of life. We fear that he has been detained," Borgmann told BR.

- Secretive network -
Many of China's mostly Moslem Uighur minority say they face cultural and religious repression.

Members of the Uighur diaspora say relatives have been jugged
Drop the rod and step away witcher hands up!
for seemingly innocuous acts such as sending Ramadan greetings to friends or downloading popular music.

Chinese authorities are also believed to have detained hundreds of thousands of Moslems in a secretive network of extra-judicial political re-education centers, where inmates are given language and ideological training and forced to participate in military-style drills.

The case surfaced after a series of administrative errors that led to illegal deportations by German authorities.

In a further controversial case, a German court in July ordered that a man who allegedly worked as a bodyguard for the late Osama bin Laden
... who doesn't live anywhere anymore...
be returned to Germany only hours after his deportation to Tunisia, saying the expulsion was illegal as he risks torture there.

The 42-year-old, identified by German authorities only as Sami A. and by Tunis as Sami Idoudi, had lived in Germany for more than two decades, but outrage over his presence grew in recent months.

Although he had won a court ruling against his deportation, the decision reached federal authorities by fax a day later -- hours after his flight to Tunisia had taken off.

Also in July, the interior ministry was forced to repatriate an asylum seeker who had been deported to Afghanistan even though his legal appeal against expulsion was ongoing.

In June, another Afghan man who was allowed back into Germany after he was illegally deported from the country was officially granted asylum.
Link


Africa North
Bin Laden bodyguard gets a provisional release in Tunisia
2018-07-28
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] A Tunisian judge on Friday ordered the provisional release of an alleged bodyguard of the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now neither a strong horse nor a weak horse, but a dead horse...
after he was detained in a terrorism probe following expulsion from Germany.

Sufian al-Sulaiti, a front man for Tunisia’s counter-terrorism apparatus said: "Sami al-Aidoudi
...who appears in our archives as Sami A and, just once, as Sami Idoudi...
appeared today before a magistrate, who decided on his provisional release as no charge has been filed against him,"

Al-Aidoudi had been taken into custody in Tunisia on July 13, upon his arrival in the country after being expelled by Germany.

He was detained in Tunisia on suspicion of involvement in terrorist acts, taking part in training in Afghanistan and being a former bodyguard to bin Laden, anti-terror authorities said.

But "after 15 days of preventative detention, Sami al-Aidoudi has been investigated by the anti-terrorist branch who have found no proof of his implication in terrorist affairs", al-Sulaiti said.

The front man added that al-Aidoudi remains under investigation by anti-terrorist authorities and that they have retained his passport.

Before his expulsion to Tunisia, al-Aidoudi had lived in Germany for more than two decades, staying in the country despite his asylum request being denied in 2007 as courts repeatedly cited the danger of torture in Tunisia.

His expulsion from Germany on July 13 was overturned by a court ruling the same day, but the order was made only after his plane was already airborne.

The German court added that authorities "knowingly" defied the order by completing the transfer to Tunisian security forces.

Considered a security threat over his suspected ties to bad boy groups, al-Aidoudi - identified by German authorities only as Sami A. - for years had to report to police but was never charged with an offence.

He has always denied being the former bodyguard of late al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden, the criminal mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks on the United States.
Whatever happened to the German wife he acquired while living all those years on the German dole, and the four children he got on her?
Link


Africa North
‘Bin Laden bodyguard’ held in Tunisia over terror probe
2018-07-16
[DAWN] A man who allegedly worked as the late Osama bin Laden
... who was laid out deader than a mackerel, right next to the mackerel...
’s bodyguard has been detained in Tunisia as part of a terrorism probe after his expulsion from Germany, a prosecution front man said on Saturday.

Known as Sami A. by German authorities and Sami Idoudi in his home country, the Tunisian "has been taken into custody following a judicial decision by the prosecutor of Tunis", said front man Sofiene Sliti.

He was wanted on "suspicion of involvement in Lion of Islam activities in Germany", following an investigation by the anti-terrorism unit, Sliti added.

Tunisian legislation allows cases to be brought against citizens accused of terrorism crimes abroad, Sliti said.

The 42-year-old suspect returned to Tunis on Friday, following a lengthy legal battle in Germany over his deportation.

Idoudi had lived in Germany for more than two decades, staying in the country despite his asylum request being denied in 2007 as courts cited the danger of torture in Tunisia.

The legal dispute is set to continue as a German court on Friday ordered Idoudi be returned to the country, after a ruling blocking the expulsion arrived once his plane was already airborne.

The court said his expulsion was illegal and accused authorities of "knowingly" defying the order by completing his transfer to authorities in Tunis.

The Tunisian authorities "have not received any official written request" for his return, said Sliti, who also represents the country’s anti-terrorism unit.

He was unable to confirm whether Tunisian authorities intended to send the detainee back to Germany.

Considered a security threat over his suspected ties to Islamist groups, Idoudi has for years had to report to police but was never charged with an offence.

He has always denied being the former bodyguard of late Al Qaeda leader Bin Laden, the criminal mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks on the United States.
Link


Europe
Former Bin Laden bodyguard, Tunisian Sami A., detained in Germany
2018-06-26
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] A suspected radical who once served as the late Osama bin Laden
... who doesn't live anywhere anymore...
’s bodyguard, was detained in Germany on Monday, police said.

The case of the Tunisian man, Sami A., sparked outrage in April after German media reported that he was receiving welfare benefits even though intelligence agencies have classified him as a potential threat.

Authorities in the western city of Bochum had asked police to detain Sami A. and the man did not resist, a front man for police there said. Top-selling newspaper Bild reported, without citing its sources, that Sami A. was now due to be deported.

Police could not confirm that, pointing instead to authorities in Bochum. A spokesperson for the city of Bochum could not be immediately reached.

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has ordered immigration authorities to expedite proceedings that would allow Germany to deport Sami A.

German authorities have been trying to deport the man, who has lived in the northwestern city of Bochum since 1997, since 2006 but the threat of torture in his home country had prevented this, according to a previous report in Bild.

Link


Europe
Germany: ‘Special Measures Committee’ to Study Deporting Osama Bin Laden’s Bodyguard
2018-04-28
[AAWSAT] The German government decided to form a "special measures committee" to study ways of deporting a Tunisian man, who allegedly served as one of the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now neither a strong horse nor a weak horse, but a dead horse...
’s bodyguards, to his home country.

Germany’s Federal Ministry of Interior announced Thursday the formation of this committee and said it will focus primarily on receiving assurances from the Tunisian government not to torture and humiliate Sami A. once he lands in his country.

The federal interior ministry established this committee back in 2005, and it is being controlled by the parliament (Bundestag).

The committee’s headquarters is in the Berlin-based Joint Counterterrorism Center, and it includes experts from the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and the Federal Intelligence Service (BND).

It is specialized in cases of terrorism suspects and "dangerous" bully boys, who are not German nationals. It also considers cases of the withdrawal of asylum from serious and criminal offenders.

A front man for the federal interior ministry said "there are attempts to deport the former bodyguard of Bin Laden" and a ministerial task force will examine the case soon.

Responding to queries from the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, the government of North Rhine-Westphalia state said the 42-year-old can’t be deported because he might face torture in Tunisia.

The man, only identified as Sami A., has lived in Germany since 1997 and gets €1,168 (£1,022) a month in welfare payments.

The figure was revealed by a regional government, after the far-right AfD asked about him.

Sami A was investigated for alleged al-Qaeda links in 2006, but he was not charged.

According to witness testimony from a German anti-terror trial in 2005, Sami A. served for several months in 2000 as one of Bin Laden's bodyguards in Afghanistan. He denies that, but judges in Dusseldorf believed the witness.

He lives with a German wife and four children in the city of Bochum, in western Germany.

After obtaining a temporary residence permit in Germany in 1999 he took several technology courses and moved to the city in 2005.

His asylum application was rejected in 2007 because the authorities had listed him as a security risk. He has to report daily at a cop shoppe.

The Federal Constitutional Service has put Sami A. since 2012 in the list of dangerous hardliners, whom the department believes they are ready to carry out terrorist operations in Germany.
Link


Europe
Osama bin Laden's former bodyguard is paid £1000 a month welfare in Germany and can't be deported
2018-04-24
[DailyMail]
  • Sami A., 42, is classified as dangerous and forced to report to police every day

  • Germany rejected his asylum application and handed him a deportation order

  • But he continues to stay after a court ruled he could face torture if deported

  • He traveled to Afghanistan in the late 1990s to become bin Laden's bodyguard

Although classified as dangerous and forced to report to police every day, authorities claim Sami A. cannot be sent back to his Tunisian homeland because the risk of torture would be too high.

But the 42-year-old, who traveled to Afghanistan in the late 1990s to become a bodyguard for the architect of the 9/11 attacks, continues to stay in Germany after a court ruled he could face torture if deported.

The state of North Rhine-Westphalia admitted it pays 1167,84 euros a month to him, his wife and their four children aged between four and 11.

The admission in the regional parliament came after a question was posed by the the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Since no other country has shown willingness to take in the Tunisian, it now seems he will remain in Germany indefinitely - even though security services still consider Sami A. to be a dangerous and central member of the Islamist scene in the country and have had him under observation since at least 2006.

The ban on deportations to Tunisia was lifted two years ago. But officials still feel that such a close ally of bin Laden would run the risk of imprisonment, torture and death.

Sami A. came to Germany as a student in 1997 before opting to become a jihadist and traveling to Afghanistan where he trained in a terror camp before becoming a bodyguard to bin Laden.
Link



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