Muslim ‘hate preacher’ might have to leave Switzerland
From Swiss Info
A Libyan Imam who received Swiss welfare and preached messages of hatred has lost his asylum status. Local authorities are looking into deporting him.
Because Abu Ramadan has a Libyan passport and has made several trips to Libya since his arrival in 1998, the migration authorities cancelled his asylum request earlier this month. Ramadan has a permanent resident permit (C), but now canton Bern can look into revoking it.
As Swiss public television reported on Wednesday, Ramadan received CHF600,000 ($620,000) in state welfare payments while preaching messages of hatred against other religions from a mosque in Biel.
The Rundschau news programme obtained a recording of Abu Ramadan preaching: “Oh Allah, I beg you to destroy the enemies of our religion. Destroy the Jews, Christians, Hindus, Russians and the Shia.” The sermon was delivered at the Ar’Rahman mosque in canton Bern.
“He who befriends a disbeliever is cursed until the Day of Judgment,” the Imam preached. He also suggested that Muslims should not be subject to local laws. “If you tell me that a Muslim has stolen or raped…that does not matter to you, and you should not talk about it,” he has been recorded as saying.
Research by Rundschau and the Tages Anzeiger newspaper revealed that the Imam has been receiving regular unemployment and other benefits for the last 13 years from the local authorities at his home town of Nidau.
Biel Security Director Beat Feurer says he will be looking into the matter, warning that people who do not integrate may be thrown out of Switzerland.
In a statement to Rundschau, he denied that his preaching attacked Switzerland or the Western world, but admitted speaking out against Israel and Zionist ideology.
According to the media reports, Abu Ramadan does not speak German or French and only rudimentary English, which virtually excludes him from the job market.
Journalists have discovered that the Imam preaches both in Biel and Neuchâtel, along with appearances on the Libyan Islamic propaganda channel Tanasuh TV.
“This is someone who does not call directly for jihad but creates the mental breeding ground for it,” Saïda Keller-Messahli, who campaigns in Switzerland against radical Islam, told Rundschau.