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Sami A., former bodyguard Osama bin Laden, was deported to Tunisia. This was banned by a court. Now, the judges are demanding: the authority of foreigners should bring back the Tunisian. The question of whether and how it should work is not yet clear.
The deportation of the ex-guard of the body of Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden to Tunisia must be overturned after a court decision. It has been presented as "grossly illegal and violates fundamental constitutional principles," the Gelsenkirchen Administrative Court said on Friday. Therefore, Sami A. "immediately recover at the expense of the foreign authority in the Federal Republic of Germany". The decision could be appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia
Sami A. will he come back?
It is not known if Tunisia will send its citizens to Germany. According to the Tunisian authorities, according to Bild, it is difficult to imagine that Sami A. could easily return to Germany as a result of the allegations.
Sami A.'s lawyers welcomed the clear words of the Gelsenkirchen Administrative Court in their decision to recover them. Tunisian. "If the authorities override judicial decisions, legal certainty is threatened," said one of the lawyers, Seda Basay-Yildiz
Sami A., clbadified by the security authorities as a Islamist danger, was accompanied Friday by a federal police officer. Düsseldorf was flown to his home country. On Thursday, the Gelsenkirchen Administrative Court had decided that he should not be deported for the moment. The court ruled its ban without any certainty for Sami A. against torture in Tunisia
Bamf did not respond to court questions
The court informed the Federal Office of Migration and Refugees (Bamf) of his decision as Sami A. was already sitting in the plane. The fact that this decision was made in Bamf only on Friday is attributable to the fact that, despite repeated requests from the court, not all the authorities involved had announced the planned deportation date, the court said. Administrative Court in Berlin
. Federal Minister of the Interior Horst Seehofer (CSU) was informed "after the completion of the repatriation, that is with the transfer to the Tunisian authorities" had been informed. The Federal Ministry of the Interior helped the authorities of North Rhine-Westphalia carry out the deportation. However, the decision on expulsion in this case is in NRW
Different interpretation of a decision
The NRW Refugee Ministry is relying on a decision of Another administrative court chamber Wednesday preceding the ban on deportation. In this document, the threat of deportation of the Ausländeramt from the city of Bochum was considered legal. "On the basis of this decision, the repatriation to Tunisia was carried out", – said in the message of the ministry. According to the Gelsenkirchen Administrative Court, the threat of expulsion "only constitutes the legal preparation of the actual deportation".
A spokesman for the Foreign Ministry told Berlin that the ministry was informed on Monday of the planned deportation. The Embbady of Germany in Tunis then announced this flight to the Tunisian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The chairman of the inquiry committee of the Amri Bundestag, Armin Schuster (CDU), pleaded for Sami A. for the moment to recover Germany. First, the next instance should decide, he told the "Central German newspaper". "I do not have sleepless nights, after all, it's a mandatory exit with al-Qaeda training."
Sami A. is arrested in Tunisia
The plane with Sami A. on board landed on Friday morning 8:11 local time at Enfidha airport in Hammamet. According to their own statements, the Tunisian authorities determine whether A. was involved in "extremist activities" in Germany. He is under arrest, said a spokesman for the Tunisian Ministry of Justice of the DPA.
Sami A. lived for years with his wife and children in Bochum. He came to Germany in 1997 to study. In 2000, he reportedly received military training at an al Qaeda camp in Afghanistan and would have heard of Osama bin Laden's bodyguards. Bin Laden is the founder of the al-Qaida terrorist network. He was killed by an American commando in Pakistan in 2011.
Subsequently, Sami A. was reportedly active in Germany as a Salafist preacher. The Tunisian has always denied these allegations. The federal prosecutor had opened a criminal investigation against him, but again in the absence of sufficient suspicion.
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