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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Srexley who wrote (251907)4/29/2002 8:29:01 PM
From: J_F_Shepard  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
"it is funny that when you cannot defend your statements you go to a cute little one liner"

Srexley....hang it up....you're bleeding all over this thread and you don't know when to quit...



To: Srexley who wrote (251907)4/30/2002 8:08:15 AM
From: Bald Eagle  Respond to of 769670
 
I've defended my statements many times, it's time for me to move on. All this started because you made a wrong assumption about me over a news article that I posted. Get on with your life, I am. Look, THIS IS A NEWS ARTICLE: It doesn't mean I agree or disagree with the content:

UK court upholds Farrakhan ban

Tuesday, April 30, 2002 Email this article
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The British government has won its legal bid to continue a ban on controversial black U.S. political leader Louis Farrakhan from visiting the UK.

The High Court quashed the 16-year ban, to the dismay of the government, after Farrakhan appealed against it.

But on Tuesday, the Court of Appeal said Home Secretary David Blunkett's decision to maintain the ban was correct based upon his assessment of the risk that Farrakhan's "notorious opinions" might provoke disorder.

The three judges said: "In evaluating that risk the Home Secretary had had regard to tensions in the Middle East current at the time of his decision."

The judges, who had been told that Farrakhan was well-known for making anti-Semitic and racially divisive views, allowed the appeal and refused permission to take the case to the House of Lords.

Blunkett said in a statement after the ruling: "I am very relieved that the view taken by successive Home Secretaries has been vindicated and the Home Secretary's right to exclude someone from the country whose presence is not conducive to good public order has been upheld.

"This has been a long haul but I am pleased with today's ruling which makes clear that the Home Secretary is both best placed and democratically accountable for these decisions."

Minister Hilary Muhammed, Farrakhan's representative in the UK, said: "Obviously we are disappointed but we are not excessively surprised.

"Very seldom do black people enjoy good news from any court anywhere to be found. We have to live with bad news on a daily basis."

He said that an appeal was being considered.

"We will continue to fight this injustice because we believe faith and justice is on our side. We have to fight for what is our due right."

Lord Janner of Braunstone QC, chairman of the Holocaust Educational Trust, told the Press Association: "I am delighted that the law has acted justly, realising the damage that Farrakhan could have done to Britain, particularly now at a time of political unrest in the Middle East, Europe and here.

"With our local elections next week, the BNP do not need encouragement from the likes of Farrakhan."

Farrakhan, 68, is the leader of the Chicago-based Nation of Islam, the published aims of which include "the regeneration of black self-esteem, dignity and self-discipline."

He has been seeking since 1986 to enter Britain to address his followers who have set up their own UK branch.

Successive Home Secretaries have refused permission but in October last year Mr Justice Turner ruled that then Home Secretary Jack Straw had failed to give justification for excluding Farrakhan from the country in 2000.

Monica Carss-Frisk QC, representing Blunkett, told the Court of Appeal judges that the right to freedom of expression enshrined in the Human Rights Convention did not apply in a case involving a decision on whether to allow a non-national into the country.

She said: "The Home Secretary was entitled to conclude that Mr Farrakhan is well known for expressing anti-Semitic and racially divisive views, particularly at a time of political unrest in the Middle East.

"To allow him into the country would pose a significant threat to community relations and public order and was therefore contrary to the public good."

Nicholas Blake QC, representing Farrakhan, told the court that in the years since the first exclusion order was made, his client had achieved a status as a spiritual and political voice of the African-American community in the U.S.

Blake said Farrakhan was not a fascist sympathiser, a holocaust denier or a supremacist seeking to liquidate other religions or races.

He said Farrakhan had not only targeted Jews in his speeches but had also "said unkind things about whites, Catholics and gays."

He added: "It is absurd to say that this is a man who is a rabble rouser. He has never been convicted of any disorderly conduct as neither has anyone who attended his meetings."