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Aussie Christian coalition petition against Iranian cleric's deportation

Published: March 10, 2010

Father Dave with Dr Mansour Leghaei

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A group called the Christian Save the Sheik Coalition says it has collected thousands of signatures on a petition to prevent the deportation from Australia of Iranian cleric Dr Mansour Leghaei.

Dr Leghaei, a moderate Iranian Shia who has lived in in Australia for 16 years, has been declared a security threat by ASIO, The Australian reports. The reasons for the ASIO assessment have not been publicly revealed.

Anglican priest Dave Smith said he could guarantee that Dr Leghaei was not a threat to national security and called on the minister to order a new security assessment.

Dr Leghaei has been given until March 19 to leave the country, after an immigration appeals tribunal rejected his final application to remain here.

His lawyer, Stephen Hopper, said the sheik would make representations to Immigration Minister Chris Evans to intervene in the case and use his ministerial discretion to halt the planned deportation.

Dr Leghaei, who preaches at the Imam Husain Islamic Centre in Earlwood in Sydney's inner-southwest, is the head of a local interfaith committee and has been instrumental in building bridges between the ethnically and religiously diverse communities in Sydney's inner-west and inner-southwest.

The Christian coalition includes Anglican, Catholic, indigenous and Muslim community leaders, including the professor who formerly headed up the Cancer Council, Alan Coates, boxer Nader Hamden and Marrickville Mayor Sam Iskander.

FULL STORY

Sheik in last-ditch bid to stay here (The Australian)

 

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Recent Comments

  1. I think we need to carefully consider the fact that ASIO have said he is a risk. Just because their reasons are not published doesn't mean they are weak. I am sure ASIO have evidence of the Sheik's complicity in something covert, that for security reasons they cannot divulge.
    We are becoming more aware of 'wolves in sheep's clothing' [priests as promoters of terrorist activities here in Australia]. All recent cases before the courts have involved an iman at the centre of plans or offering advice to support them. After all, Dr Leghaei wouldn't admit something like this, would he? The reason given for keeping him in Australia - that he has formed a bridge between the young muslims and Australian society - is tenuous. Despite his involvment for 16 years in that area of Sydney, we have a growing problem of many examples of a lack of integration.

  2. We must support our own Australian security network. They have the responsibility of gathering information and protecting this country. Church leaders always have good intentions and mean well, but they should think twice and then again before interfering in another’s area of responsibility.

  3. If the man has done something wrong, charge him and let him answer the charges in open court. If not, let him get on with his life.
    We should, on principle, not blindly accept the allegations of the secret police, even if they are our secret police.

  4. Does ASIO have a history in recent years of acting in bad faith? Of being the kind of agency we associate with sinister representations of "secret police"? If not, I think we should accept their assessment and any other considerations known to the Minister for Immigration.

  5. We need 'secret police' but they must always be subject to parliamentary scrutiny.
    Since the Dr Hanniff affair, I have been less than happy with the 'beefed up' status of ASIO. The present government should not necessarily accept this Howard government action, and should not be afraid to be seen to question it.

  6. Perhaps Christians could expend their energies trying to save the victims of Islam - the Assyrians, Maronites, Melchites, Armenians, Copts and others, who are eyewitnesses to what Islam has done for them.

  7. The Australia Defence Association has no opinion on Dr Leghaei but we do respect the professionalism of ASIO and its staff.
    Moreover, to describe ASIO as 'secret police' is just name-calling. There is a world of moral, legal and professional difference between a secret police in totalitarian countries and the security intelligence agency of a Western liberal democracy.
    Particularly as in the Westminster-system countries (UK, Canada, Australia, NZ, etc) our security intelligence agencies are not police forces at all and deliberately have no powers of arrest or other law enforcement executive functions.
    It is also silly to describe ASIO as somehow 'unaccountable'. ASIO responsibilities are defined and governed by very strict legislation, the organisation answers directly to a Minister (the Attorney-General) and Parliament (including annual reports to Parliament), is independently scrutinised by the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security (IGIS) and an all-party joint parliamentary committee - and its assessments can be appealed (independently again) to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.
    By all means debate whether Dr Leghaei should be deported or not (after losing all his appeals) - after all such debate is a freedom that organisations such as ASIO are here to preserve - but surely such debate should stick to the facts and be an informed one, rather than wallow in emotive hyperbole.
    Neil James
    Executive Director
    Australia Defence Association
    www.ada.asn.au
    PO Box 320, Erindale Centre, ACT, 2903

  8. Iran needs to have religious freedom.

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Gospel Verse for 31 July 2010
...though [Herod] wanted to put [John] to death, he feared the people, because they held him to be a prophet. [Matthew 14:5]

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