Sunday, June 13, 2010

Deporting 'Son of Hamas': A Death Sentence

Thanks to Atlas,,

WATCH HIS VIDEO,, this is a man who lived islam!!!


Deporting 'Son of Hamas': A Death Sentence




While millions of illegals cross the border into the open arms of Obamcrats and entitlement offices, apostates and asylum seekers are being persecuted by a jihad friendly O-ministration.

Mosab Hassan Yousef is the son of a jailed Hamas terrorist leader and MP, Sheikh Hassan Yousef, the most popular figure in that extremist Islamic organization. Mosab, as a young man, assisted his father for years in his political activities. He converted to Christianity and operated undercover in the service of Israel's intelligence agency for a decade. Yousef reveals this information in his book, Son of Hamas: A Gripping Account of Terror, Betrayal, Political Intrigue, and Unthinkable Choices.

There is a fatwa (a death threat) on Yousef's head: go here. And yet his request for political asylum was denied in February 2009. His case has automatically proceeded to the deportation stage, and on June 30 at 8 a.m. he will appear before Judge Rico Bartolomei in Homeland Security Immigration Court in San Diego.

His fight is our fight.

We should protecting this man, footing the bill for his security, not delivering him to the barbarians who will have his head faster than you can say, hope! Change! Apostasy is punishable by death and many Muslims live in constant fear:

On 21 August 2008, the al-Qaida-affiliated Global Islamic Media Front released a statement written by Abu al-Harith al-Ansari concerning the conversion of Mosab Hassan Yousef from Islam to Christianity. This conversion is significant because Yousef’s father is a senior Hamas leader in an Israeli prison and Yousef himself allegedly was in a leadership position in Hamas’ youth movement.

If Obama is trying to deport a brave hero for freedom who risked his life to fight jihad, how safe is ..........Rifqa Bary when she turns 18 in August? She too is without status.

Meanwhile, flood the White House and the State department with calls for apostasy asylum. And write Judge Rico Bartolomei in Homeland Security Immigration Court in San Diego -- Homeland Security File# A 088 271 051 - if anyone can get his contact info, please send and I will post.

I have little faith in petitions, but sign this one anyway. It's all to the good. Join his facebook page.

Here is a snippet of Yousef on Hannity -- it it any wonder that Obama wants to send him to his death?

Mosab Hassan Yousef: "The god of the Koran hates Jews anyway, if there was "occupation" or not"

The problem is with the god of Islam"

"this is not about being brainwashing, this is how people grow up everything around you in that society school, street every evet is telling you those facts about Islam."

[...]

Hannity: We keep hearing about that there is a distinction, the difference between radical Islam and mainstream Islam

Mosab Hassan Yousef: This is a big mistake. Comparing between moderate Muslims and fanatics. This is not how we compare it. All Muslims to me are the same. At the end of the day they believe in the god of the koran and they believe that this koran is from that god.

Hannity: You're saying that most Muslims think that jihad is where they need to go

Mosab Hassan Yousef: It's not their choice. If they believe that the koran is from the word of god ...........

Hannity: So let me ask this again. So when people talk about moderate Islam, you're saying it doesn't exist?

Mosab Hassan Yousef: It doesn't exist.

[...]

The most criminal terrorist Muslim has morality, a minimum of humanity more than his god. Their god is a terrorist and ignorant.

If anyone knows Mosab ............have him contact Atlas - writeatlas@aol.com. I will help. Does he have a good lawyer specializing in apostasy?

Deporting 'Son of Hamas' Wall Street Journal

The U.S. may send an antiterror agent back to the West Bank.

Mosab Hassan Yousef is a best-selling author who wrote "Son of Hamas" about his life as a Palestinian who became an informant for Israeli intelligence. He's probably near the top of every Islamist terror hit list, yet, incredibly enough, the U.S. may soon deport him as a terror threat.

In 2007, Mr. Yousef came to the United States, where he converted to Christianity from Islam and applied for political asylum. The request was denied in February 2009, Mr. Yousef says, on grounds that he was potentially "a danger to the security of the United States" and had "engaged in terrorist activity." His case has automatically proceeded to the deportation stage, and on June 30 at 8 a.m. he will appear before Judge Rico Bartolomei in Homeland Security Immigration Court in San Diego.

But unless Ms. Calcador knows more than she's saying, this is bizarre. As a spy for Israel, Mr. Yousef had to make his colleagues believe he was a loyal member of Hamas. He used that trust to gain information that he provided to Israeli intelligence, which used it to prevent terror attacks and save lives. One of Mr. Yousef's handlers at Shin Bet confirmed his book's account to the Israeli daily Haaretz, and his father, Sheikh Hassan Yousef, has disowned him from the Israeli prison he has occupied since 2005. (See our Weekend Interview with the younger Yousef, "They Need to Be Liberated From Their God," March 6, 2010.)

The problem seems to be that, under a provision of U.S. immigration law, anyone who is shown to have provided "material support" for terrorist organizations is automatically denied asylum. In the relentless way that bureaucracy works, this is being interpreted as leaving little discretion for deserving exceptions like the case of Mr. Yousef. In some cases Homeland Security does have the power to issue a waiver of this "no admission" rule—an option that was not exercised before Mr. Yousef's asylum was denied.

If Mr. Yousef were a security threat, you'd expect that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency would have found reason to detain him. Yet he remains free to travel and even to hit the book-selling circuit. A senior government official tells us that Homeland Security will "not be mounting a stiff defense" of the 2009 decision to deny him asylum, which is at least one burst of common sense.

Mr. Yousef is a native of the West Bank, which is where he would presumably return if he is deported and where Hamas would immediately seek to kill him. Under the Convention Against Torture, the U.S. has an international treaty obligation not to return people to countries where their lives would be at risk. That concern stopped the return to China of the Uighers at Guantanamo, and rightly so. It would dishonor the U.S. to deport a convert in the war on terror because our immigration bureaucracy is too obtuse to make even life and death distinctions.



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