Yes, you read that right. Theresa May suspected this man of being a jihad terrorist, and so she wanted to keep him IN Britain.
Theresa May sure does love her some jihad terrorists. Britain has a steadily lengthening record of admitting jihad preachers without a moment of hesitation. Syed Muzaffar Shah Qadri’s preaching of hatred and jihad violence was so hardline that he was banned from preaching in Pakistan, but the UK Home Office welcomed him into Britain.
The UK Home Office recently admitted Shaykh Hamza Sodagar into the country, despite the fact that he has said: “If there’s homosexual men, the punishment is one of five things. One – the easiest one maybe – chop their head off, that’s the easiest. Second – burn them to death. Third – throw ’em off a cliff. Fourth – tear down a wall on them so they die under that. Fifth – a combination of the above.”
May’s government also recently admitted two jihad preachers who had praised the murderer of a foe of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws. One of them was welcomed by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Meanwhile, the UK banned three bishops from areas of Iraq and Syria where Christians are persecuted from entering the country. And of course, May banned me from entering the country for saying: “[Islam] is a religion and is a belief system that mandates warfare against unbelievers,” which is like banning me for saying humans need oxygen to breathe.
“Theresa May tells Syrian migrant he can’t leave UK – because he’s a suspected TERRORIST,” by Rebecca Perring, Express, February 5, 2017 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
THERESA MAY has banned a Syrian migrant from leaving Britain because he is suspected of being a terrorist.
The now Prime Minister “personally” ruled he should stay in the UK to protect national security when she was acting as the Conservative Party’s Home Secretary.
Her officials believe the man is keen to flee Britain for Syria to join the barbaric Islamic State (ISIS) and would pose more of a threat if he came back to the UK.
Bosses have repeatedly attended out to prevent the suspected terrorist from leaving British shores.
A letter from the Home Office told him: “You are assessed to hold Islamic extremist views and have expressed a desire to travel to Syria to engage in fighting.”
The Syrian man – known as AZ in legal documents – gained refugee status in Britain back in August 2012, according to the Mail Online.
However he was refused travel documents in line with the Geneva Convention on “national security grounds” when he asked to travel to Jordan.
After launching a judicial review in to his case, the man was told his desire to fight for ISIS was behind the ban….