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"They also allowed me to visit the country anytime I decide," Badawi told IOL.
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By
Ahmed Fathy, IOL Staff
CAIRO,
July 16, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The United
States administration has lifted a visa ban on an internationally
renowned British Muslim scholar and apologized to him for the
inconvenience, allowing him to visit the country anytime.
"I
woke up Friday (July 15) to a phone call from the office of British
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and his aides apologized on his behalf
for the US move and told me that the minister would raise the issue
with top US officials," Zaki Badawi, head of the Islamic College
in London, told IslamOnline.net by phone Saturday, July 16.
Badawi
said few hours after the conversation, the US embassy in London called
him to apologize in their turn and stressed that it was an
unintentional mistake.
"They
also allowed me to visit the country anytime I decide," he added.
Badawi,
also the chairman of the Council of Mosques and Imams, was refused
entry at New York's JFK airport late Wednesday, July 13, when he
arrived to give a lecture at the Chautauqua Institution on law and
religion in society.
The
Muslim leader said he returned to London after he was detained for six
hours by the US immigration staff, who were "very
embarrassed."
Prominent
British Muslim preacher Yusuf Islam, previously pop star Cat Stevens,
was denied entry to the US in September of last year.
Famous
Swiss-Egyptian scholar Tariq Ramadan, one of the most respected
philosophers of conflict and religion, was barred in August from
entering the US to take a post at the renowned Notre Dame University,
although he has now been told he can reapply for a visa.
Concerns
Badawi
said the US authorities seem to be haunted by the July 7 blasts in
London and tightened entry restrictions.
"A
passport of an imam coming to lecture about Islam was a cause for
concern in the wake of the London blasts," he said.
"The
US is always accusing imams of being the root of all troubles and it
appears to be that they considered me as one of the
trouble-makers," he told IOL.
He
said the American visa officer simply thought that denying me a visa
would spare his country unnecessary troubles.
"It
is an officer’s mistake not a legal one since they extended an
apology and reactivated the visa," said the renowned scholar.
Badawi
said there is no excuse for the treatment he received at the hands of
US authorities.
"I
have no links to a specific group and I am an independent man."
Badawi
also ridiculed the "naïve" questioning by immigration
officers.
"They
asked me such naïve questions like ‘what is your birthplace?’ and
‘why are you visiting the US?’ then they surprisingly told me that
I was nervous in answering their questions, my answers don’t match
the truth and that I was on a FBI watch list; afterwards I decided to
go back to London."
Last
week, Badawi joined hands with Christian and Jewish leaders in
condemning the London terrorist attacks, which left at least 54 people
killed, including four bombers.
Positive
The
British Muslim scholar said although he was outraged by the six-hour
questioning, the experience was positive for himself and the Muslim
world in general.
"The
US is pressing ahead with ratifying an agreement denying EU visas for
people on its hit list, but this embarrassing situation would force
the European countries to think twice before accepting the
proposal," Badawi told IOL.
"The
US apology for the mishap is also positive for my image," he
added.
On
whether he would visit the US in the future, the prominent scholar
replied in the affirmative.
"I
have a religious duty and I enjoy broader and close ties with millions
of Muslims in the US and seek in the meantime to enter into
constructive dialogue with Christian organizations to spread justice
and peace," said Badawi, who last visited the US in 2003.
He
added that he would pay his next visit to the US in October to lecture
at the Chautauqua Institution.
Badawi,
born in Egypt in 1922, first came to Britain more than half a century
ago.
He is a moderate Muslim voice and a promoter of dialogue among the
different faiths.
He
writes and lectures on a wide variety of issues including the role of
Islam in Britain and human rights.
The
Muslim scholar, who was given an honorary knighthood, was in 2003
among the guests of Queen Elizabeth II at a state banquet for US
President George W. Bush.