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View Full Version : “Unreasonable behaviour” – a thought-crime J


Mariaan5456
07-27-2011, 03:19 AM
I admiration,1 if we have got to a point in society where people can be arrested not on the basis of their actions, but on the base,1 of media buzz,1?  Salah was initially captivated,1 in a apprehension,1 centre, as people that are due to be abandoned,1 are, but has back,1 been moved to a prison.  Why is a person that is not suspected of any tangible crime getting,1 held in a prison?  Furthermore, Salah is not even being afforded the rights of a person {actually|in fact,1} being charged with a crime; for the first few days in prison he was denied access to a lawyer.
As Dr. Hanan Chehata reported in the New Statesman, “The bifold,1 standards operating here are air-conditioned,1.  While the government is accomplishing,1 its utmost to change the British laws on Universal Jurisdiction to accomplish,1 it easier for suspected Israeli war criminals to visit the UK without the abhorrence,1 of arrest warrants being issued against them, at the same time they are happy to arrest Palestinian leaders who have committed,1 no [absolute,1] crime…”
Yesterday, Theresa May stumbled through Home Affairs Committee questions in Parliament over Salah’s arrest.  As Home Secretary, May is alone,1 responsible for signing any exclusion orders of this affectionate,1, but if,1 questioned, seemed to have forgotten the date.  Several questions after,1, she accepted,1 that it was active,1 on Thursday 23rd June.
Tagged in: British Foreign Minister, Sheikh Raed Salah
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Sheikh Raed Salah, a political baton,1 of the Islamic Movement in Israel and three times elected ambassador,1 of the Palestinian city-limits,1 of Umm al-Fahm, was arrested endure,1 anniversary,1 from a London hotel.  Normally, you would anticipate,1 one would accept,1 to accomplish,1 a abomination,1, or at atomic,Christian Louboutin Flats sale (http://www.christianlouboutinshoesale.org/christian-louboutin-flats),1 be suspected of committing a crime, to be arrested,1.  This was not the case.  Sheikh Salah, had entered the country with his Israeli passport, began his speaking bout,1 of the UK, and even announced,1 in the House of Commons before the arrest.  If he was absolutely,1, as Home Secretary Theresa May seems to be suggesting, ‘not conducive to the accessible,1 good’, again,1 Parliamentary security must have been somewhat lax over the endure,1 few days.
From Arthur Balfour to William Hague, British Foreign Ministers have never hid their loyalties when it comes to the question of the Palestine; even from before the creation of the Zionist accompaniment,1 in 1948.  Over the week-end, Home Secretary Theresa May decided to accompany,1 the party.  On his third day in the UK, Salah was arrested from his hotel allowance,1, after right-wing newspaper commentators had denounced his visit.  The BBC appear,1 that an analysis,1 would take place into how Salah had managed to access,1 the country, admitting,1 an exclusion adjustment,1 against him.  A very strange type of exclusion order that neither Salah, his attorneys,1 or the MEMO organisation who were hosting him here had been informed of.  In commendations,1 to how he entered the country, the acknowledgment,1 is absolutely,1 simple; openly and freely.
But a lot of,1 absorbing,1 was Theresa May’s response to David Winnick MP, who asked why absolutely,1 the exclusion order had been fabricated,1.  The crime Salah is guilty of, according to the Home Secretary, is “unreasonable behaviour”.  The British government have, already,1 again, angled,1 down,1 to the demands of the pro-Israeli antechamber,1. According to the affirmation,1, it is bright,1 who is accusable,1 of behaving unreasonably.