Author Topic: Muslim Family Upset They Were Denied Their “Right” to Enter The U.S.  (Read 217 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

rangerrebew

  • Guest
Muslim Family Upset They Were Denied Their “Right” to Enter The U.S.

Posted on May 20, 2014 by Admin   4 Comments


Muslims think they can whine, lawfare and complain their way to submission. Their sense of entitlement is unbelievable. There is absolutely no country in the world that is required to offer an explanation or a reason for denying entry to a, legal or otherwise, alien. The United States is not required to explain to these Muslims why they had been detained at a border-post or denied entry. Muslim privilege has it limits. They ought to get used to it.

Mehdiya Hudda, the 22-year old daughter, was born in Canada, but she still has to wear black shroud of al Qaeda ideology. She suspects the family was turned back at the border because her father, Shafiq Hudda, is an imam at the Islamic Humanitarian Service, a registered “charity” based in Kitchener that runs a Muslim community centre and drop-in centre.

She doesn’t mention that her father has never been allowed to enter the U.S. since being refused entry in 2003 due to ties with terror groups.

It’s not hard to figure out what kind of “charity” Shafiq Hudda is engaged in by looking at his own family. Charity begins at home, isn’t it?

607 muslim women detained 610

Not fully sure if this is a picture of the husband and wife or daughter and mother. Haven’t been able to figure that out yet.

.

Muslim Family Upset They Were Denied Their “Right” to Enter The U.S.

Posted on Sunday, May 18th, 2014 | Conservative Infidel blog

 

by: Rick Wells

607 muslim women detained 610

A Kitchener, Ontario woman said she felt humiliated when her family was detained for approximately six hours at a U.S. border crossing and then denied entry into the United States.

A shopping trip to Lewiston, NY, was interrupted and ultimately never took place when three family members were detained and turned back. They are upset that they were never provided with an explanation as to why but wonder if it might have been their Muslim attire.

Mehdiya Hudda, 22, a Canadian citizen, was traveling with her husband, a 26-year-old native of Tanzania and her mother, Sabira, a 46-year-old Kenyan by birth who is a naturalized Canadian citizen.

She describes the incident as humiliating, degrading and unjustified.

When approached by a border agent, she details how rather than directing them to pull out of a line, he asked for the keys to their van and placed spike strips behind the rear tires.

They were instructed to leave all of their belongings in their vehicle, including wallets, purses and cellphones and led into an office.

The three were fingerprinted, photographed and held in a room for six hours. Their belongings and vehicle were searched during that time as well.

At approximately 1 am they were released but instructed to return to Canada.

Hudda was upset that she was never provided with a reason for the detention, asserting that there should be a concrete reason. The implication in that line of thinking is that entry into the United States is a right, which she is entitled to unless there is a “good reason” for it to be denied. Obviously, that is not the case.

She tells the tale of how her family was also denied entry to the U.S. in May of 2003 when they tried to attend an Islamic conference in Washington, DC. That was her last attempt to go to America, though her mother has made subsequent trips.

Hudda had hoped American attitudes would have changed in the eleven years since. She said, “This many years later and still it’s the same thing, we’re being treated like criminals. After all these years, they’ve not changed. It just boggles my mind.”

More of the story comes out as it relates to her mother and her frequent trips into the U.S. When asked how her mother paid for that travel, Hudda told the agents, “We used to take groups on religious pilgrimages to different shrines.”

Then again there could be that connection to her father, Shafiq Hudda. He’s an imam at the Islamic Humanitarian Service in her Canadian hometown of Kitchener. He has never been allowed to enter since 2003. Could be something he said.

U.S. Customs spokesperson Richard Misztal refused to comment on this case specifically, but he noted that anyone wishing to enter the U.S. bears “the burden of proof to establish that they are clearly eligible to enter the United States.

In order to demonstrate that they are admissible, the applicant must overcome ALL grounds of inadmissibility.” He went on to remark that in 2013, over 132,000 inadmissible aliens” had been prevented from entering the U.S. He added, “Inadmissibility grounds included immigration violations, criminal and national security-related reasons.”

It’s a shame that these effective enforcement techniques aren’t applied in respect to our southern border or our airports as well.

http://themuslimissue.wordpress.com/2014/05/20/muslim-family-upset-they-were-denied-their-right-to-enter-the-u-s/
« Last Edit: May 20, 2014, 10:12:06 am by rangerrebew »