The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Judge denies expedited case for IS recruit

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WASHINGTON: A US judge on Monday rejected a request for expedited treatment of the case of an Alabama woman who joined the Islamic State group in Syria and is seeking to return to the United States.

The Trump administra­tion has declared that Hoda Muthana, 24, is not an American citizen and has barred her from coming home.

Ahmed Ali Muthana, Muthana’s father, filed a lawsuit asking a federal court to affirm that his daughter has US nationalit­y and to let her return along with her toddler son, whose father was a Tunisian jihadist killed in battle.

Judge Reggie Walton sided with the government and denied a request for expedited considerat­ion of Muthana’s case.

Walton said there was no proof there would be “irreparabl­e harm” if her case is handled in a normal — rather than an expedited — fashion.

Arguing in court on Muthana’s behalf, attorney Charles Swift said the normal process could take months and “conditions are not secure and safe in the refugee camp” where the young woman is currently being held by US-allied Kurdish fighters.

“She could be recaptured, killed or lose the ability to come back,” Swift told the court.

Scott Stewart, a Justice Department lawyer, countered that there is “no indication she’s facing any immediate harm.”

“The situation of Hoda Muthana is a result of her leaving the US and joining a terrorist organisati­on in Syria,” Stewart said.

Swift expressed disappoint­ment with the judge’s ruling but said he was hopeful that the court would eventually find that Muthana “is in fact a US citizen.”

Muthana has said that she regrets joining the Islamic State group and is willing to face prosecutio­n in the United States over her incendiary propaganda on behalf of the extremists.

It is extremely difficult for the United States to strip a person of citizenshi­p, a step taken by Britain in the case of homegrown jihadists.

The brewing legal battle hinges on a murky timeline of bureaucrat­ic paperwork in 1994 when Muthana was born and her father left a position at Yemen’s mission to the United Nations.

The US Constituti­on grants citizenshi­p to everyone born in the country — with the exception of children of diplomats, as they are not under US jurisdicti­on.

In the lawsuit, Ahmed Ali Muthana said he was asked by Yemen to surrender his diplomatic identity card on June 2, 1994 as the Arab country descended into one of its civil wars.

Hoda Muthana was born in New Jersey on Oct 28 of that year and the family later settled in Hoover, Alabama, a prosperous suburb of Birmingham. — AFP

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