Monday, May 20, 2013

Worry about Islamic Conquest Not the Mexicans


Muslims are now the biggest welfare recipients in the UK and the USA and they were brought here legally by Obama. Obama allows 80,0000 Muslims to enter the USA every 3 months. If you read the 4 stages of Islamic Conquest then you will understand where and what is happening in the USA. 

You say it can't happen here? Think again it is happening and happening faster then you think. I said once on Tea Party.Org radio that in 2012 the invasion of Muslims will begin to affect America with bombings , silencing those who dare speak up etc. Sharia will start to affect our laws. You people are worried about illegal Mexicans! They are the least of our problems. 


Hate preacher Abu Qatada complains his five-bedroom taxpayer funded home is not big enough due to lack of storage space

  • Radical cleric's wife and five children will join him in Jordan, tribunal hears
  • His lawyer says Qatata is unhappy £1,400 a month home lacks storage
  • Promised to leave Britain 'voluntarily' as long as human rights are protected
    Radical cleric Abu Qatada's family will leave Britain with him if he returns to Jordan because the taxpayer-funded home they moved into last Christmas is too small, a tribunal heard today.
    The hate preacher will take his wife and five children to the Middle East, his lawyer said, weeks after he pledged to leave the UK 'voluntarily' as long as his human rights are protected.
    Qatada has said he will leave Britain when a treaty is ratified which will ensure him a safe trial after more than a decade of attempts to deport him.
    The 53-year-old lives in North London with his family on state handouts said to total £1,400 a month, with the failure to kick him out if Britain already costing taxpayers more than £3million, including £500,000 on surveillance.
    House
    David Cameron is considering a temporary withdrawal from the European human rights convention in order to finally remove Abu Qatada from Britain
    Breakthrough: Abu Qatada, pictured leaving his old house, says the home the taxpayer has rented for him in North London (left) since December, which cannot be fully shown for legal reasons, is too small
    Today his lawyer told a hearing of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission that the terror suspect - real name Mohammed Othman - expects to be acquitted when he stands trial on terror charges and argued for him to be released on bail.
    Danny Friedman told the court the charges against his client on involvement in a bomb plot were 'tainted'.
     
    He also said the family were unhappy about the size of the house they had been placed in by the Home Office.
    The taxpayer-funded residence does not have enough storage space for all the family's possessions, he said.
    It is understood there is no legal basis for forcibly removing his family as two of the children were born in Britain.
    Couple: Abu Qatada shopping with his wife near his home five years ago. His lawyer said today she and his five children will leave Britain with him should he go
    Couple: Abu Qatada shopping with his wife near his home five years ago. His lawyer said today she and his five children will leave Britain with him should he go
    Qatada's lawyer said this morning he should be released on bail to give him 'a period of time with that family in which he and they can prepare to leave the country'.
    The 53-year-old has long demanded to be moved to bigger houses funded by the public purse on the grounds he needs more space for his wife and children.
    But local residents in North London have said they were disgusted by Qatada’s claims. One mother of two, who did not want to be named, said when he last moved: ‘Do you have to be a terrorist now to get a bigger house? He already has five bedrooms.’
    The Home Office released this image of Home Secretary Theresa May signing the fair trial guarantees with Jordan that she believes will reassure courts that torture evidence would not be used against Abu Qatada
    The Home Office released this image of Home Secretary Theresa May signing the fair trial guarantees with Jordan that she believes will reassure courts that torture evidence would not be used against Abu Qatada
    Labour and Conservative ministers have been trying to deport Qatada for a decade
    Still smiling: Labour and Conservative ministers have been trying to deport Qatada for a decade but have failed
    Mr Friedman told Mr Justice Irwin at the central London hearing that Qatada would not pose a risk of absconding from bail and should be let out of Belmarsh.

    KEY EVENTS IN ABU QATADA'S BATTLE AGAINST DEPORTATION

    September 16 1993 - The Jordanian father of five claims asylum when he arrives in Britain on a forged passport.
    May 1998 - He applies for indefinite leave to remain in Britain.
    April 1999 - He is convicted in his absence on terror charges in Jordan and sentenced to life imprisonment.
    February 2001 - Arrested by police over involvement in a plot to bomb Strasbourg Christmas market. Officers find him with £170,000 in cash, including an envelope marked 'For the mujahedin in Chechnya'.
    August 2005 - The preacher is arrested under immigration rules as the Government seeks to deport him to Jordan.
    April 2008 - The Court of Appeal rules that deporting him would breach his human rights because evidence used against him in Jordan may have been obtained through torture.
    February 18 2009 - In a landmark judgment, five Law Lords unanimously back the Government's policy of removing terror suspects from Britain on the basis of assurances from foreign governments. It is ruled he can be deported to Jordan to face terror charges.

    April 18 2012 - Abu Qatada lodges an appeal - potentially delaying his deportation by months.
    March 6 2013 - He is returned to jail over fears the terror suspect was trying to communicate with associates, in breach of bail conditions.
    March 27 2013 - Court of Appeal admits hate preacher is 'very dangerous' but rules sending him to face a terror trial in Jordan would not be fair.
    April 17 2013 - Home Office says it will take its battle to the Supreme Court.
    April 23 2013 - Court of Appeal rejects government request to appeal.
    Qatada was put back in prison in March over breaches of his strict bail conditions.
    He has pledged to leave Britain voluntarily despite winning rulings from British and the European Court of Human Rights that he could not be deported to his home country.
    His change of heart follows the signing of a treaty between the UK and Jordan which will ensure evidence from torture cannot be used against him at trial.
    The agreement is yet to be ratified by the Jordanian Parliament.
    The Government has been trying to deport Qatada for nearly a decade. He was convicted of terror charges in his absence in 1999.
    His bail conditions prevent him from turning mobile phones on at his taxpayer-funded home in London.
    A total of 17 mobile phones, three USB sticks, one SD card, five digital media devices and 55 recordable CDs or DVDs were found at the property.
    Qatada is also being investigated by Scotland Yard over suspected extremist material found during the search of his home.
    He was once described by a Spanish judge as 'Osama bin Laden's right hand man in Europe'.
    The breakthrough is a victory for Theresa May, who announced last month that she had thrashed out a mutual assistance treaty with Jordan, guaranteeing Qatada the right to a fair trial.
    Human rights judges in Britain and Strasbourg had halted his removal to Jordan on the grounds some of the evidence used against him may have been obtained by torture. Mr Fitzgerald said Mrs May’s treaty had been the key development in the case.
    His lawyer said last month: ‘In light of that treaty I’m authorised to say that if, and when, the Jordanian parliament ratifies the treaty he will voluntarily return to Jordan.’
    The new treaty is expected to be ratified in the UK next month and a Jordanian minister has suggested it could be cleared in his country within a matter of months.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2327480/Hate-preacher-Abu-Qatada-complains-bedroom-taxpayer-funded-home-big-lack-storage-space.html#ixzz2Tq8qb7fe
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