100,000 demand release of Syrian man in Hungary

100,000 demand release of Syrian man in Hungary
A Hungarian appeals court will make its final verdict Thursday (Sep. 20) in the case of a Syrian man convicted of terrorism for throwing stones at police and trying to enter the country illegally, at the height of the migrant crisis in 2015, VOA reported.

Amnesty International delivered a petition demanding his release and signed by more than 100,000 people, to the Ministry of Justice.

Amnesty International said his actions can in no way be interpreted as terrorism. The human rights group said the hearing in Budapest is the first big test for the country’s judicial system since the European Parliament voted last week to sanction Hungary over its record on fundamental rights.

The defendant, named as Ahmed H., was living in Cyprus at the time of the alleged offense. In the summer of 2015, he travelled to the Balkans to help his elderly parents and other family members as they fled the war in Syria. Like hundreds of thousands of other migrants and refugees, they were making their way from Turkey to Greece, through the Balkan states, trying to reach Western Europe.

Their journey was halted at the Hungarian-Serbian border as authorities closed the crossing. Ahmed took part in protests that erupted at the border

"He threw a few stones and he urged the police to let the refugees and migrants who had amassed there cross through to Hungary," said Eda Seyhan of Amnesty.

Ahmed H’s wife, Nadia, said she hoped the Hungarian authorities would heed the call for Ahmed to be released.  

“Ahmed has been defamed and dehumanized, but he has continued to stay strong. The only just outcome is for Ahmed to win this appeal and to be released immediately and unconditionally,” said Nadia.

“Ahmed is my life, my joy, my husband, my best friend. I want to see my children with their father again. I want my husband back. I want my family together.”

Ahmed was arrested by Hungarian police. In 2016, he was convicted on charges of terrorism and sentenced to 10 years in jail.

"The defendant himself shook the fence, and fiddled with the lock, and threw solid objects towards the policemen line on three occasions," the judge, Andrea Nagy, read after the verdict.

Amnesty’s Seyhan says Ahmed’s case is symptomatic of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s vilification of migrants.

"The Orban government have tried to justify their refusal of asylum-seekers and their ill-treatment of refugees by arguing that refugees and terrorism are in some way associated," Seyhan said. "Having found no evidence for this assertion, they’ve really used the Ahmed case to back up their claims."

The European Parliament last week voted to enact so-called Article 7 sanctions against Hungary for flouting EU rules on fundamental rights. During a debate ahead of the vote, Orban claimed he was legitimately defending Europe’s external borders.

"Hungary is going to be condemned because the Hungarian people have decided that this country is not going to be a country of migrants," Orban told EU lawmakers.

But Amnesty sees the upcoming verdict as a new chance for Hungary.

"What we’re hoping for on Thursday is that Hungary will see the trial of Ahmed as an opportunity to show to the international community and others that it is coming back on a path of the rule of law and of human rights," Seyhan said.

التعليقات (0)

    0

    الأكثر قراءة

    💡 أهم المواضيع

    ✨ أهم التصنيفات