Tuesday, February 07 2012, 7:49PM
“I don't understand what Theresa May is going on about when she says we cannot deport Abu Qatada. I watched BBC's Newsnight programme last night and listened to a guy with legal expertise saying the exact opposite. He stated that both France and Italy who are signed into the same deportation rules as the UK, have both deported scum like Qatada who threaten national security and those two countries got no more than a slap on the wrist from the European courts. I'm afraid this is a case of the UK wanting to stick by the rules 'Good old Blitey' in principle of not going against the ridiculous European Court ruling. I say do as France and Italy do, send this piece of scum back to Jordan on the first available plane and to hell with him. DO IT NOW !!!!”
Tuesday, February 07 2012, 10:03PM
“Abu Qatada should be deported,who cares whether he is tortured or not.
He made his bed and should lie in it.
He is prepared to kill people.
He came to Britain because he knew we are a soft touch and would pity him.
What brainless people there are in the European Court of Human Rights?
And listening to Labours Yvette Cooper nearly made me pewk,she was practically defending this vile man.”
Sunday, February 19 2012, 6:09PM
“British society, media and establishment are not against Abu Qatada, they are against Muslim migrants who have been contributing for the economic, social and spiritual prosperity of the British economy and society. They are against every thing connected with Islam and Muslims. The Manifesto of the Norwegian Terrorist and mass murderer clearly states that in Europe Pakistani Muslims are on the increase because of migration and high birth rate and one day they are going to demand the Pakistan of Europe. When he was in school, he was afraid of a Pakistani gang. He is afraid of popularity of Islam and revertion of Europeans.
Abu Qatada has been incarcerated for nine years, and not once has he been found guilty of anything illegal.Home secretary Theresa May called Qatada a 'very dangerous terrorist'. Former security minister Hazel Blears said we should be 'horrified' at the prospect of Qatada being on the streets. Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said the government should 'strain every sinew' to have Qatada deported.
Abu Qatada is an innocent man. In England, we assume people are innocent until proven guilty. Even after monitoring him for a quarter of a century, the authorities have not gathered enough evidence to charge Qatada, let alone have him convicted. In this country, he has become known as the 'spiritual leader of al-Qaeda' by publishing Islamist propaganda and expressing support for bin Laden. Yet despite many attempts to do so, the authorities have not been able to link him directly to specific terrorist activity, either in the UK or abroad.
Majority of anti-Muslim stories are not about terrorism but about Muslim
culture--the hijab, Muslim schools, family life and religiosity. Muslims in the west ought to be recognised as a western community, not as an alien culture.”
by soundmandave
Wednesday, January 18 2012, 1:39AM
“Perhaps if he had committed some major crime like hosting a media sharing website in the UK, he could be extradited to the USA with the prospect of a long Jail sentence.... the European courts don't seem to object to that.”