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Abu Qatada sacrifices his own sleep for The Messenger ﷺ. "I heard that the Christians who saw the companions conquered Ash-Shaam say, We swear by Allah (SWT) that as far as has reached us, these Companions (rala) are better than the Disciples (rala) of Christ (as)!" (Ibn Kathir). It's a must to love all of the Noble Companions (ra/a) equally and not love one less at the expense of another (ie such as those whose love for Hadrat Mu'aawiyah [ra] diminishes for his apparent opposing of Ameerul Mu'mineen Hadrat Alee [ra]) - however, of course, their ranks naturally will differ. Thus one must not say, for instance, "I love Hadrat Aboo Bakr (ra) more than any of the other Companions [ra/a]" but rather say, 'Hadrat Aboo Bakr (ra) is the most exalted of the Noble Companions [rala] -but I love them all equally.
UK to defend veterans from Irish attack on Troubles lawStarmer helped hate preacher Abu Qatada fight his deportation in courtBBC's choice for Eurovision called Israel an ‘apartheid state' responsible for genocideRead all these articles and stay expertly informed anywhere, anytime with a digital subscription. Start your free one-month trial today to gain unlimited website and app access. Cancel anytime. Sign up here: http://bit.ly/2WRuvh9 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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TRUEBILL link: https://www.truebill.com/shaun Scotland's Johnnyboy book UK link: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09NYD4MF4 Scotland's Johnnyboy book World link: https://books2read.com/u/49krDw After life-threatening run-ins in Liverpool's gangland, Sicarius ends up in prison with Abu Qatada, said by the media to be Osama bin Laden's right-hand man.
The recent feuding within Nelson Mandela's family has reminded us that within the anti-apartheid hero's myth is a man and a family with very human frailties, as Gabriel Gatehouse ponders when he visits a play in Johannesburg. Yolande Knell pays a visit to the deported cleric Abu Qatada's new home - Jordan's al-Muwaqar Prison. Jo Fidgen joins the crew of a Norwegian whale hunting boat. Ed Stocker finds out why some poorer Bolivians can't afford to eat their staple food, quinoa, any more. And Dany Mitzman on the Calabrian mafia's most recent and high profile victim.
In the Mail online...Neighbours of Abu Qatada have threatened to stop paying council tax if his family is not removed from the area. This was in the news as Qatada was this morning flown to Jordan in a private jet commissioned by the Home Office from RAF Northolt after a ten-year battle costing taxpayers 2.1;million.we're led to believe his wife, two sons and two daughters will remain living in the UK. Baroness Butler-Sloss, who gave Jon Venables and Robert Thompson lifelong secret identities after they committed one of Britain's most notorious child murders when killing James Bulger, is reported as saying he did not deserve to be locked up for ever....and she denied there was evidence to show that paedophiles who seek out indecent images online also carry out physical assaults. All this is reported in the UK newspapersHeadlines in the Sun UK tell us."Four of us had sex with one girl on first night... we didn't even ask her name."..The paper goes on with the gory details........it's 4am in the Greek resort of Kavos. Two British teens are having sex in the street, while another is filming himself performing a sex act on a girl so drunk she is barely conscious. Other young Brits cheer as a 19-year-old downs a pint of his own urine, and the queue for A&E stretches on to the vomit-covered street.Kavos is now one of the most popular resorts for UK teenagers......
In the Mail online...Neighbours of Abu Qatada have threatened to stop paying council tax if his family is not removed from the area. This was in the news as Qatada was this morning flown to Jordan in a private jet commissioned by the Home Office from RAF Northolt after a ten-year battle costing taxpayers 2.1;million.we're led to believe his wife, two sons and two daughters will remain living in the UK. Baroness Butler-Sloss, who gave Jon Venables and Robert Thompson lifelong secret identities after they committed one of Britain's most notorious child murders when killing James Bulger, is reported as saying he did not deserve to be locked up for ever....and she denied there was evidence to show that paedophiles who seek out indecent images online also carry out physical assaults. All this is reported in the UK newspapersHeadlines in the Sun UK tell us."Four of us had sex with one girl on first night... we didn't even ask her name."..The paper goes on with the gory details........it's 4am in the Greek resort of Kavos. Two British teens are having sex in the street, while another is filming himself performing a sex act on a girl so drunk she is barely conscious. Other young Brits cheer as a 19-year-old downs a pint of his own urine, and the queue for A&E stretches on to the vomit-covered street.Kavos is now one of the most popular resorts for UK teenagers......
A UK couple told the Sun how they claim £17,680 a year in benefits . They don’t even bother looking for work because it would leave them worse off. Danny Creamer is 21, and Gina Allan is 18, and they spend each day watching their 47inch flatscreen TV and smoking 40 cigarettes between them in their comfortable two-bedroom flat. It is all funded by the UK taxpayer, yet the couple say they deserve sympathy because they are “trapped”. They even claim they are entitled to their generous handouts because their hard-working parents have been paying tax for years. The comments written on the website do not support their claims. The couple, who have a four-month-old daughter Tullulah-Rose, say they can’t go out to work as they could not survive on less than their £1,473-a-month benefits. Whilst this is one story MPs are moaning about the quality of food served in their highly-subsidised Parliament restaurants demonstrating they are clearly not in the real world. The list of grumbles includes “tough as old boots” roast beef and their gripes will shock taxpayers who pick up 75 % of the bill. If this isn't bad enough UK TAXPAYERS are set to cough up £6MILLION this year to pay the bills of hate cleric Abu Qatada. This man has told everyone how much he hates the west. The Islamic fanatic racked up legal costs of £5,000 A DAY last month after being allowed to stay in Britain. He will cost an astonishing £5MILLION this year to foot the security bill for the 52-year-old who has been closely monitored since his release from jail last November. There sems to be some agreement that an armed robber with a breathing problem who died when have-a-go punters tackled him as he raided a bookies, got what he deserved. Alan Levers, 50, burst into the Ladbrokes brandishing a handgun and wearing a gas mask. We are told he had a breathing problem. Two punters wrestled him to the floor and sat on him until cops arrived to find him unconscious ten minutes later. Paramedics tried to resuscitate Levers but declared him dead after 20 minutes in Plymouth, Devon.
A UK couple told the Sun how they claim £17,680 a year in benefits . They don’t even bother looking for work because it would leave them worse off. Danny Creamer is 21, and Gina Allan is 18, and they spend each day watching their 47inch flatscreen TV and smoking 40 cigarettes between them in their comfortable two-bedroom flat. It is all funded by the UK taxpayer, yet the couple say they deserve sympathy because they are “trapped”. They even claim they are entitled to their generous handouts because their hard-working parents have been paying tax for years. The comments written on the website do not support their claims. The couple, who have a four-month-old daughter Tullulah-Rose, say they can’t go out to work as they could not survive on less than their £1,473-a-month benefits. Whilst this is one story MPs are moaning about the quality of food served in their highly-subsidised Parliament restaurants demonstrating they are clearly not in the real world. The list of grumbles includes “tough as old boots” roast beef and their gripes will shock taxpayers who pick up 75 % of the bill. If this isn't bad enough UK TAXPAYERS are set to cough up £6MILLION this year to pay the bills of hate cleric Abu Qatada. This man has told everyone how much he hates the west. The Islamic fanatic racked up legal costs of £5,000 A DAY last month after being allowed to stay in Britain. He will cost an astonishing £5MILLION this year to foot the security bill for the 52-year-old who has been closely monitored since his release from jail last November. There sems to be some agreement that an armed robber with a breathing problem who died when have-a-go punters tackled him as he raided a bookies, got what he deserved. Alan Levers, 50, burst into the Ladbrokes brandishing a handgun and wearing a gas mask. We are told he had a breathing problem. Two punters wrestled him to the floor and sat on him until cops arrived to find him unconscious ten minutes later. Paramedics tried to resuscitate Levers but declared him dead after 20 minutes in Plymouth, Devon.
Mark Coles profiles Abu Qatada, the radical Islamic cleric described by the Home Secretary as "a dangerous man, a suspected terrorist, who is accused of serious crimes in Jordan". Seen by some as Britain's most wanted man and Osama Bin Laden's right hand man in Europe , the Palestinian-Jordanian scholar arrived in the UK in 1993 seeking asylum and claiming he had been tortured in Jordan. This week, after serving seven years, without charge, in a British prison, a court ruled that he cannot be deported to Jordan where he's been convicted in his absence of involvement in terrorist activity. But who is Abu Qatada, a serious intellectual leader who believes in violent Jihad and accordingly to former Home Secretary David Blunkett, " a prime suspect" in the war on terror or as one friend tell us "a changed man"?
Law blogger Charon QC talks to David Allen Green, Jessica Vautier and Carl Gardner about Julian Assange’s Supreme Court judgment, Abu Qatada, the Twitter joke appeal, social mobility and pay for trainee solicitors, and whether Britain should be a republic.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty. This entry provides an audio source for iTunes U.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty. This entry provides an audio source for iTunes U.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty. This entry provides an audio source for iTunes U.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty.
There has recently been a great deal of controversy surrounding judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the attempted deportation to Jordan of radical cleric Abu Qatada, and the decision to oblige the UK to give convicted prisoners the right to vote. Professor David Feldman discusses the judgements of the European Court, and the corresponding actions by UK courts and the UK Government. Professor Feldman is Rouse Ball Professor of English Law, Honorary Bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and Fellow of the British Academy. He has acted as advisor to a number of Government Joint Select Committees, and was Judge of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002-10. For more information about Professor Feldman, please refer to his profile at http://www.law.cam.ac.uk/people/academic/dj-feldman/723 Law in Focus is a collection of short videos featuring academics from the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law, addressing legal issues in current affairs and the news. These issues are examples of the many which challenge researchers and students studying undergraduate and postgraduate law at the Faculty.
Law blogger Charon QC talks to Carl Gardner about the recent legal clockup about Abu Qatada and his reference to the European Court of Human Rights, Jeremy Hunt, Parliament and the Leveson inquiry, Lord Sumption's recent speech about judicial scrutiny of government foreign policy, the quashing of Sam Hallam's conviction, secret justice and whether the […]
A senior judge calls Muslim preacher Abu Qatada ‘a truly dangerous individual’, yet still we cannot insist that he is exported and tried in his home country... [Image courtesy of :Dar via... Things Unseen. For people who have a faith, and those who just feel there’s more out there than meets the eye.
Clive James asks why at a time when Iraqis who have risked their lives for Britain in Basra need a newspaper campaign to be allowed into the UK, radical cleric Abu Qatada apparently can't be allowed out.
Clive James asks why at a time when Iraqis who have risked their lives for Britain in Basra need a newspaper campaign to be allowed into the UK, radical cleric Abu Qatada apparently can't be allowed out.