On Friday 1st July Mr. Raed Salah was transferred from an Immigration Detention Centre to a formal prison. No good reason for this transfer has been given.
The transfer to prison will significantly interfere with the preparation of Mr Salah's appeal against the Deportation Order. The deadline for Mr Salah to Appeal is the 6th July 2011. The prison have informed Mr. Salah's lawyer that his legal team will not be able to visit him until the 11th July, 5 days after the deadline is due to pass.
Mr Salah's solicitor, Tayab Ali of ITN Solicitors, said 'Mr Salah remains resolute and determined to challenge the Deportation Order. Despite the difficulties his transfer to prison poses for us, a formal Notice of Appeal against the Deportation Order was lodged on Friday. We are confident that the Order will be overturned.
The Home Secretary has grossly misjudged my client. In stark contrast to the false picture that has been painted, he is a man of peace, a widely respected leader who campaigns tirelessly for his people. By attempting to silence him in the United Kingdom, the Government is turning its back on the Palestinian people.
The merits of the Home Secretary's Order are now a matter for the Courts'.
NAZARETH, (PIC)-- The Knesset will discuss Sunday the Raed Salah law, which provides that anyone who supports “terrorism” would be banned from lecturing or visiting Israeli educational institutions without a permit from the Minister of Education.
Under the law, anyone accused of breaching Israeli security and entering educational institutions without a permit could serve 18 months in prison.
The law came after Raed Salah, the leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, was banned from lecturing at Haifa University and allowed to do so at Tel Aviv University, which was opposed to by many members of the Israeli Knesset.
Salah and others have faced prior charges relating to support of Hamas and other Palestinian factions and thus harming Israeli security.
Meanwhile, a new poll by newspaper Israel Today found that most Israelis would like the present Israeli political scene to remain unchanged.
It says that no major changes are expected to be made in the Israeli presidency and the majorly right-wing Knesset should elections take place.
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