HST274
Member
Talk about a loaded question! 

He can’t be barred from entry, he’s a citizen of here and nowhere else.
He is only a citizen of the UK. He is not a citizen of another country, although it appears he "may be entitled to become a Gambian citizen".He's a citizen of somewhere else, otherwise this wouldn't be an issue.
He is only a citizen of the UK. He is not a citizen of another country, although it appears he "may be entitled to become a Gambian citizen".
That is why he is coming here.
You should also ask yourself why the UK and the US were relatively happy for Turkey to prosecute him and give him a lenient sentence, and not do it themselves. The US conveniently considers Aine Davis "not one of the four 'Beatles'". The answer is staring everyone in the thread right in the face.
Why do you think he is being allowed back in with such little resistance?He chose to join IS, so isn't the sort of person we should be allowing back into the country.
Why do you think he is being allowed back in with such little resistance?
Oh but the government have an interest in showing how difficult it is to stop people like this coming into the country!If what you're insinuating is the case, then it should never have been allowed into the papers in the first place.
Oh but the government have an interest in showing how difficult it is to stop people like this coming into the country!
Yes, he chose to join IS and yes, that makes him an undesirable. However he is a British citizen and so has the inviolate right to reside in the United Kingdom.He chose to join IS, so isn't the sort of person we should be allowing back into the country.
This worries me a lot. The government could easily bring in some harsh new law supposedly aimed at terrorists, but then mainly apply it to others such as environmental / political activists or to simply deter a whole bunch of people from getting involved in things like protest movements because they are afraid they might be deported.If you're wanting to take away rights - you can't be seen to do this on 'law abiding citizens' so you create examples of why it's great to limit human rights etc, then once done you can apply to everyone.
It’s not like he’s just going to be allowed back in with no checks, is it? You can bet that MI5 and Counter Terrorism Police will be keeping a very close watch.He chose to join IS, so isn't the sort of person we should be allowing back into the country.
I believe large sections of the media are also to blame for this distrust and confusion. Take this thread title for example, we get fed stories of IS terrorists i.e the latest news on Shamima Begum which gets wheeled out a few times a year; this then riles people up and causes division and hate in out society and I would guess a spike in hate crimes. Paradoxically I'd also think these stories will actually increase the risk of people being radicalised into far-right terror groupsIt's unfortunate that some people are more convinced that our Government is trying to embed 5G chips in people in the form of a vaccine, or creating 'false flag' events when something terrible happens, and other nonsense - instead of seeing the quite simple changes, with a massive and possibly irreversible impact, that are being done in broad daylight - and often with full support of the people who will eventually suffer (a classic 'first they came for xxxx...' example).
It wouldn't surprise me at all if that's the case: even if he initially left to legitimately join IS, he well may have found out that the reality didn't match the expectation and looked for a way out.Almost certainly this man has some sort of deal with the government having probably squealed a bunch of intel to the intelligence services, perhaps more.
It’s not like he’s just going to be allowed back in with no checks, is it? You can bet that MI5 and Counter Terrorism Police will be keeping a very close watch.
I agree with the above suggestion that cases like this are worth bringing into the media and getting people all upset over (same with Shamima Begum), as if you're wanting to take away rights - you can't be seen to do this on 'law abiding citizens' so you create examples of why it's great to limit human rights etc, then once done you can apply to everyone.
Who determines what an ordinary, law abiding citizen is? As we saw with Begum, this seemed to be more related to satiating the blood lust of the right-wing tabloids. Who is to say who could be the next on that list, perhaps we could examine the genealogy of the High Court Judges that the Daily Mail deemed to be "Enemies of the People".That is just silly conspiracy-theory stuff. Almost no-one wants to take away rights from ordinary law-abiding citizens. There's a concern in some quarters (mainly on the political right) that terrorists and criminals are abusing the law to avoid justice, and there are moves to reform laws on human rights etc. to stop that happening, but it is targeted at those criminals and terrorists etc. - there really isn't some evil hidden agenda to use that as an excuse to target law-abiding citizens in the way you're suggesting.
With respect, that is patently false.That is just silly conspiracy-theory stuff. Almost no-one wants to take away rights from ordinary law-abiding citizens. There's a concern in some quarters (mainly on the political right) that terrorists and criminals are abusing the law to avoid justice, and there are moves to reform laws on human rights etc. to stop that happening, but it is targeted at those criminals and terrorists etc. - there really isn't some evil hidden agenda to use that as an excuse to target law-abiding citizens in the way you're suggesting.
Almost no-one wants to take away rights from ordinary law-abiding citizens.
This government has taken rights away. Among others, I have lost my right to live and work in EU countries and my Italian, French and Spanish friends have lost their right to live in the UK.
The government is in the process of taking away rights with the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022. Yes, we will still be able to protest, but only if the Home Secretary decides that we aren't being disruptive.
The government has proposed to remove rights from us by threatening to withdraw from the ECHR and neuter the Supreme Court so that we lose the right to appeal to the court to decide if the Government is acting unlawfully.
That's all fine and dandy if you don't subscribe to the views that certain protesters may have, but by the time it comes for you to get upset about something that you do care about, it may be too late.But those rights would in most cases, have no impact on ordinary law-abiding citizens: They only generally come into play if you are planning to do things like commit terrorist acts or public order offences (I suppose you could come up with edge cases where there might be some rare side-effect from the legislation, but that's not the primary intention).
So removing his British citizenship would make him stateless unless his right to Gambian citizenship is automatic and unqualified (and even then, presumably subject to his actual applying).He is only a citizen of the UK. He is not a citizen of another country, although it appears he "may be entitled to become a Gambian citizen".
That is why he is coming here.
If he does come back here, I very much doubt that he'll be entirely free anyway - if there's any doubt about his activities he'll very much be "on the radar".I can’t help feeling that we’re probably safer with him knowing where he is and what he’s doing. There’s always the risk that if he returns to Gambia, he might disappear off the radar and be a danger to British tourists and business interests given that any sense of grievance he had will probably have been doubled now.
First they took the right of free movement/residence, and I said nothing. Then they took the right to protest, and I said nothing. Then they took my liberty, but there was nobody to say anything and nothing they were allowed to say...I was replying to a post that seemed to be alleging that those concerns were somehow a smokescreen for a desire to deprive everyone else of their rights.
First they took the right of free movement/residence, and I said nothing. Then they took the right to protest, and I said nothing. Then they took my liberty, but there was nobody to say anything and nothing they were allowed to say...
If he does come back here, I very much doubt that he'll be entirely free anyway - if there's any doubt about his activities he'll very much be "on the radar".
TheTimes said:Whitehall sources said that the national security threat posed by Aine Davis, who is from London, would be urgently assessed and he could be placed under restrictive measures. It is likely he will be arrested at the airport and face a criminal investigation.