http://msnbc.msn.com/id/15320752/site/newsweek/ 
Denied Entry 
U.S. security officials have prevented an influential Islamic scholar from
attending a conference in New York. 
By Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball 
Updated: 3:54 p.m. PT Oct 18, 2006 

Oct. 18, 2006 - A leading member of Britain's Muslim community, headed to
New York for an academic conference, was forced to leave his transatlantic
flight without explanation by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
earlier today.

The removal of Kamal Helbawy, the 80-year-old founder of the Muslim
Association of Britain, came just minutes before his American Airlines
flight was due to take off from London's Heathrow Airport. The incident is
the latest instance in which U.S. security officials have denied prominent
Muslim leaders entry to the United States.

The move startled officials at New York University Law School who had
invited Helbawy to be a featured speaker at a conference the organization is
sponsoring Thursday night on the Muslim Brotherhood movement. "He's a really
respected guy," said Paul Cruickshank, a fellow at the law school's Center
for Law and Security, which had organized the conference. "He's very
influential within the Muslim community in Britain and his name is
recognized throughout the world." 

Spokesmen for the Homeland Security Department and FBI declined any
immediate comment on why Helbawy, a British citizen with a valid passport,
was removed from the plane. A senior U.S. government official, who declined
to be identified talking about sensitive matters, said he was puzzled by the
incident because there appeared to be no intelligence reporting linking
Helbawy to terrorism.

Helbawy, an Egyptian-born Islamic scholar, was for years a leading spokesman
in Europe for the Muslim Brotherhood, a secretive organization founded in
Egypt that some U.S. officials say is dedicated to spreading a radical brand
of Islam throughout the world. 

While not denying his affiliation with the Brotherhood, Helbawy described
himself in a telephone interview today as a moderate who has publicly
denounced terrorism  "thousands of times."  He also noted that he serves on
the Muslim Council of Britain-a semiofficial British government advisory
committee that works to turn British Muslims away from violence. 

As recounted by Helbawy, he had already settled into his seat on American
Airlines Flight 105 this morning when he heard his name called on the
loudspeaker just a few minutes before the plane was due to take off. After
reporting to the front of the aircraft, a member of the flight crew asked
him to step off the plane for two minutes. When he did so, he was greeted by
a U.S. Homeland Security official who began questioning him about his
background, his connections to the Muslim Brotherhood and his reasons for
attending the conference in New York. 

"If you want to ask me any more questions, my solicitor should be here,"
Helbawy said he then told the Homeland Security agent. The agent replied
that if he wanted to go to the United States, he should go to the U.S.
Embassy in London and get a visa-an explanation that Helbawy said made no
sense because British citizens generally don't need to apply for a visa in
advance of a temporary visit to the United States.

"This is stupidity," Helbawy said about the decision to evict him from the
plane. "They shouldn't be preventing moderates from talking and discussing.
The extremists are going to point to this and say, 'This is your American
administration. Look at what they are doing. You talk about trying to bring
peace. This is what is going to happen to you'."

The action against Helbawy comes just a few weeks after the State Department
denied a visa to Tariq Ramadan, another prominent Islamic scholar, for the
second time. That action provoked widespread criticism from civil-liberties
groups who noted that, like Helbawy, Ramadan has publicly disavowed
violence.

Both cases, however, may suggest heightened U.S. government sensitivity
about the Muslim Brotherhood, an organization whose precise goals and
methods have become a subject of increasingly intense debate. Ramadan, for
example, is the grandson of Hassan al-Banna, who was the founder of the
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Although he no longer serves as the spokesman
for the group in Europe, Helbawy said he is still a member of the
Brotherhood. Officials familiar with U.S. intelligence estimates say the
Brotherhood itself is generally not regarded as a terrorist organization,
although factions that have splintered from the group-some of which later
became part of Al Qaeda-did later turn to violence.

Karen Greenberg, the executive director of New York University's Center for
Law and Security, said that Helbawy was the second Brotherhood member
invited to this week's conference who was denied entry to the United States.
Abdel Monem Abul ElFotouh, a leading member of the Brotherhood in Egypt, was
also denied a visa to enter the United States after already being announced
as a speaker at the conference.

Greenberg said the controversy about the Brotherhood, and its ultimate
goals, is one of the reasons her organization thought it was so important to
have a conference on the subject. Her goal, she said, was to have members of
the Brotherhood speaking at the conference rather than simply American or
European academics talking about what they think the Brotherhood represents.

"They didn't want to have his conversation to happen in public," said
Greenberg about the U.S. government officials who prevented Beldawy from
coming to the country. "It looks like they are afraid of the words that are
going to come out of somebody's mouth." 

Update: A spokeswoman for the Customs and Border protection bureau of the
Department of Homeland Security told NEWSWEEK late Wednesday that Helbawy
was taken off his flight after her bureau advised the airline that he was
"inadmissible" to the United States, but declined to explain why he had been
deemed ineligible to enter the country. 

 

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