Four Muslim Preachers Banned from Entering France

France said Thursday it had banned four Muslim preachers from entering France to attend an Islamic conference, saying their "calls for hatred and violence" were a threat to public order.
President Nicolas Sarkozy had wanted to ban the high-profile Islamic clerics from attending the conference next month in the wake of a series of killings by al-Qaida inspired gunman Mohammed Merah that shocked France.
Saudi clerics Ayed Bin Abdallah al-Qarni and Abdallah Basfar, Egyptian cleric Safwat al-Hijazi and a former mufti of Jerusalem Akrama Sabri are banned from entering France, a statement said.
"These people's positions and statements calling for hatred and violence seriously damage republican principles and, in the current context, represent a serious threat to public order," said the statement from Foreign Minister Alain Juppe and Interior Minister Claude Gueant.
The ministers also voiced "regret" that prominent Swiss intellectual Tariq Ramadan has been invited to the April 6-9 meeting organized by the Union of Islamic Organizations in France (UOIF).
They said his "positions and statements are against the republican spirit, which does not do any service to France's Muslims".
France cannot prevent Ramadan from entering as Switzerland is a member of Europe's visa-free Schengen zone.
Influential Qatari preacher Yousuf al-Qaradawi and Mahmud al-Masri of Egypt have decided not to come for the conference, the statement said.
Ramadan is considered one of Europe's leading Muslim thinkers and was an advisor to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
His grandfather founded Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, of which his father was a senior member exiled by former Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser.
He is known for promoting a modernized form of Islam and for his opposition to the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. He has been barred from entering U.S. territory since 2004.
Sarkozy said on Monday that Qaradawi, 86, an influential Qatar-based Sunni Muslim cleric, was not welcome in France.
Qaradawi, who hosts a popular show on al-Jazeera satellite television, backed the Arab Spring uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya, and has launched a fund-raising effort for the Syrian opposition.
That ban, which has now turned into a withdrawal, was criticized by the International Union of Muslim Scholars which Qaradawi heads.
The union said that Qaradawi is "a moderate scholar who contributed to combating extremism in Islamic thoughts."
The cleric is accused of having made anti-Semitic and homophobic statements and was banned from entering Britain in 2008. He has been banned from entering the United States since 1999.

If Arab head of states have any dignity, they would ban all Zionists (like Feltman) coming to Arab countries.

Good. These Islamofascists should stay in their own little hate-filled corners of the world.

John from Koura. If there were no Zionists, Arabs and Muslims will find someone else other than themselves to blame for their misery.
Nice one France. I hope they can go further and ban such events from taking places in just France, but in all of Europe and the North America. These events only exacerbate the divisions between Muslims in the West and no-Muslims. They make it much harder for Muslims to integrate themselves in the Western Cultures. I have attended some of these events in the past and found them to be a propaganda for promoting Primitive Sharia Laws among Western Muslims. This is definitely not helping them with proper integration and assimilation. No wonder why Islamophobia is on the rise in the West. The more they talk about the supremacy of Sharia Laws over Western Laws, the more they will face actions such as the ones taken by France.