An odd report — she doesn’t have to go home, but admitted she was “unruly.” Meredith “Hijab” Heagney, a willing journalistic tool of the Islamic supremacist agenda, casts aspersions on Rifqa’s claim that her father had threatened to kill her — despite the manifest flaws in the official investigations of the matter. In any case, if he didn’t, why doesn’t she have to go home?
Curiouser and curiouser.
“Runaway teen convert and parents end dispute,” by Meredith “Hijab” Heagney for the Columbus Dispatch, January 19 (thanks to Pamela):
The long legal dispute over runaway teen convert Fathima Rifqa Bary apparently ended in Franklin County Juvenile Court late this afternoon when the girl and her parents agreed that she’ll stay in the custody of Children Services and the family will try to resolve their issues with counseling.
That leaves two options for Rifqa, who is in foster care: She could eventually reconcile with her parents and go home or stay in foster care until her 18th birthday on Aug. 10.
Rifqa admitted she was unruly when she fled her parents’ home last July to live with a Christian pastor and his family in Florida. She said at the time that her father, Mohamed, had threatened to kill her for abandoning the family’s Muslim faith, although authorities say they never found credible evidence that that was true.
Mohamed and Aysha Bary and their daughter all agreed today not to continue with the Juvenile Court dependency case. The next hearing, besides a minor hearing regarding a gag order on Monday, is set for her birthday.
Today’s decision ends months of legal action in Florida and Ohio.
In a statement read by Rifqa’s attorneys, both she and her parents said they loved each other and believe counseling is the best route.