Canada Deports Convicted Palestinian Terrorist to Lebanon.
The Canadian government has made the decision to deport Mahmoud Mohammad Issa Mohammad, who was a terrorist active in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
After a 26 year legal battle Mahmoud Mohammad Issa Mohammad, a Palestinian terrorist who was active in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine was recently been deported from Canada to Lebanon. The Palestinian terror organization was founded in 1967 and made the headlines in 1968 after assaulting an El Al flight taking off in Athens. Mohammad and the other PFLP terrorists fired 83 rounds and lobbed grenades at the Boeing 707 killing an Israeli passenger. A Greek court had sentenced him to 17 years imprisonment but he was set free in 1970 after Palestinian terrorists hi-jacked a Greek plane and demanded his release, threatening to kill all passengers on the plane if Greek authorities didn’t comply. After living in Madrid with his wife, Mohammad arrived in Canada in February 1987 avoiding Canadian immigration authorities by concealing his past.
In December of 1987 when the Canadian government learned about Mohammad’s violent past with the PFLP, he was notified that he would be deported but Mohammad was able to postpone his deportation for 26 years by claiming refugee status and constantly appealing his case to the Canadian courts. Canada’s Immigration Minister Jason Kenney stated “Mr. Mahmoud Mohammad Issa Mohammad represents just how broken Canada’s immigration and refugee determination systems had become under previous governments.”
“This case is almost a comedy of errors, with delays, with a system that was so bogged down in redundant process and endless appeals that it seemed to some that we would never be able to enforce the integrity of Canada’s immigration system,” said Minister Kenney. Kenney also stated that he hopes that Canada’s new Faster Removal of Foreign Criminals Act will ensure that convicted criminals will no longer be able to spend an extended period of time within Canada.
By Rachel Avraham
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