NAIROBI, Jan. 11 (Xinhua) -- The radical Jamaican cleric who was deported
to Gambia last week has been returned after the airlines in Nigeria refused to
fly him to the west African nation.
The deportee's lawyer Mbugua Mureithi told a news conference in Nairobi on
Sunday night that they had located Abdullah Al-Faisal in a prison facility in
Nairobi.
Mureithi who was accompanied by Muslim Human Rights Forum Executive
Director Al Amin Kimathi said Kenya's efforts have been thwarted by the refusal
of several countries to allow Faisal to pass through their borders or travel on
their airlines.
"We have been able to locate him, he is being held at the Industrial Area
GK Prison and we don't understand why he is there because he has never been
charged in court," Kimathi told journalists.
It was the second time the east African nation had tried unsuccessfully to
deport the cleric who was arrested a week ago in Kenya's coastal city of
Mombasa.
The Kenyan authorities said Faisal's history of radical statements and
connections with convicted terrorists made him a threat to Kenya's security.
Kimathi and Mureithi telephoned Al-Faisal's mobile phone and put him on
loudspeaker during the press conference where he was heard saying: "I was
deported to Gambia but when I reached Nigeria, an airline there declined to fly
me to Gambia. I was then returned to Nairobi and now I am here."
"I am a public figure, the Gambian government does not have a problem
accepting me. I was given a choice to make and chose there, but the airline that
was to fly me from Nigeria declined to take me on board."
"Now I am in prison, I do not know how I got here and I would like the
Muslim community out there to help me because I am a public figure," Al-Faisa
added.
The preacher was deported from Nairobi on Thursday following orders by
Kenyan Immigration Minister Otieno Kajwang.
Al-Faisal was convicted in Britain on terrorism-related charges in 2003 and
deported on release in 2007. On arrival in Jamaica, the Islamic Council of
Jamaica banned him from preaching in its mosques.
The Kenyan authorities held Al-Faisal at the country's main airport for the
better part of last week as they plotted his next destination.
Kenya had flown him to Lagos, Nigeria. From there, he was scheduled to fly
to Gambia and then to Jamaica. But airlines in Nigeria refused to fly him to
Gambia.
The Kenyan authorities reportedly drove him to the border of Tanzania last
Tuesday because he had entered Kenya from there, but Tanzania refused him entry.
On Thursday, Gambia offered to help get him to Jamaica, but now it is
unclear how he can travel to Gambia.
Mureithi said he planned to go to court on Monday morning to compel the
government to release Al-Faisal.
He said they were concerned "because he has expressed concerns at his
health which is now deteriorating and you see he is being held without having
committed any crime. He wants to be released to the Muslim community."