What's new

British journalist Sami Hamdi detained by US authorities

BouncerGuy

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 29, 2023
Runs
39,821
Soumaya Hamdi was planning for the family holiday she would soon be taking with her husband when she received a text message that changed everything. “Is it true that Sami is being abducted?” a friend asked.

She had called her husband, British-Tunisian commentator and journalist Sami Hamdi, earlier that day to check in on him, as he travelled around the United States on a speaking tour discussing Israel’s war on Gaza. When he didn’t answer, Soumaya had assumed he was at a speaking engagement.

Instead, he had been detained by US immigration authorities, news that came as “a complete shock”, she told Al Jazeera.

“That’s not the text message that I think anyone ever wants to read,” she said

It was Sunday, October 26. Sami had been stopped at San Francisco International Airport. Unbeknownst to him, his visa had been revoked by US authorities two days earlier after a pressure campaign by anti-Muslim and pro-Israel social media influencers.

The detention of the 35-year-old critic of Israel’s genocide on Gaza has sparked a legal battle, with his lawyers filing emergency petitions against his detention and his wife, British parliamentarians and UK civil society groups demanding their government take action.

His case is the latest in what Muslim advocacy groups describe as a campaign to silence pro-Palestinian voices in the US through immigration enforcement.

‘Bundled into a black van’

Hamdi’s speaking tour was just his latest across the US – his commentary emphasising continued support for the Palestinian people has grown in popularity among American Muslims and pro-Palestinians since the war on Gaza began in October 2023.

On Saturday evening, he addressed the annual gala of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim civil right advocacy group, in Sacramento and was due to speak at another CAIR event in Florida the next day.

But as he moved through San Francisco airport’s domestic terminal on Sunday morning, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers approached him.

“They took him to a big black van,” Soumaya said, recounting what her husband later told her when she later reached him. “He asked them, and this must have been the second or third time, he said, ‘I need to be able to tell someone that I’ve been taken by ICE.’ So they said, ‘OK, you got one text message.’”

Hamdi managed to send a brief message to CAIR before officers confiscated his phone. When Soumaya later called, an ICE officer answered and hung up on her.

“The officer himself hung me up, then switched the phone off,” she said.

It was around midnight when Hamdi was finally able to call his wife for 30 seconds from the Golden State Annex detention centre in California, some five to six hours from the airport.

“He sounded really under pressure,” Soumaya recalled.

Days later, authorities transferred him in the middle of the night to another facility for processing before returning him and interrogating him without his lawyers present, she said.

She has spoken to him twice since his detention.

The couple have three children, including a 10-month-old baby. “The kids don’t understand why they can’t reach him,” Soumaya said. “Sami is a family man.”

Legal challenge

On Tuesday, CAIR’s California chapter filed a federal habeas corpus petition, requiring the government to justify Hamdi’s detention, along with an emergency temporary restraining order to stop authorities from moving him.

The filings aim to stop officials from moving Hamdi to a distant facility, a step CAIR says could isolate him from his lawyers and friends.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said Hamdi “cheered on” the October 7 Hamas-led attacks, while the spokesperson for the DHS, Tricia McLaughlin, said, “Those who support terrorism and undermine American national security will not be allowed to work or visit this country.”

It shared an edited clip by MEMRI, a pro-Israel group which says it is an extremism monitor, to justify his detention, in which Hamdi said: “Don’t pity them [the Palestinians], they don’t want your pity, celebrate their victory.”

A week later, and on several subsequent occasions, Hamdi clarified his remarks. “What Muslims are celebrating is not war; they’re celebrating the revival of a cause – a just cause,” Hamdi told The Thinking Muslim podcast a week after October 7. His family have pointed to Hamdi’s own words – “Racism, Islamophobia, anti-semitism, genocide, and war crimes need no explanation or definitions for humanity to recognise them and stand firmly against them”.

Soumaya, dismissed the allegations against her husband as “outrageous” and a “smear campaign targeting his advocacy for Palestinian rights”.

“The reason why these allegations have been made about Sami is because he’s become too effective of a speaker,” said Soumaya. “He’s on record as saying that billions shouldn’t be sent by the American government to save Israel when American citizens need housing and healthcare … So it’s not like he’s been criticising the United States, he’s been criticising a foreign government, and he’s being targeted for that.”

In an open letter to Vice President JD Vance, Sami’s father, Mohamed El-Hachmi Hamdi, said criticism of Israel was “not a crime but a moral duty”, adding that his son should “be encouraged, not sanctioned and barred from entering America”.

Zahra Billoo, executive director of CAIR’s San Francisco Bay Area office, which assembled Hamdi’s legal defence, told Al Jazeera the challenge aims to protect Hamdi’s constitutional rights.

“Despite what Laura Loomer, Amy Mekelberg and various government accounts have been tweeting, no charges have been levied against Sami,” she said, referring to far-right activists who claimed credit for his detention.

Billoo likened Hamdi’s case to other foreign pro-Palestine advocates detained by ICE, including Mahmoud Khalil, Rumeysa Ozturk, and Badar Khan Suri.

The Trump administration has invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, a wartime law being broadly interpreted to allow the government to target foreign nationals whose speech it deems harmful to US foreign policy.

Immigration lawyer Hassan Ahmad, who represents Sami and has taken other similar cases like Suri’s, told Al Jazeera this reflects “a broad crackdown on Palestinian advocacy through immigration law”.

He said Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism are “distinct but frequently overlap, and we’ve seen that more since October. This is part of the larger problem of de jure Islamophobia in the US justice system.”

“This is weaponising immigration to implement structural anti-Palestinian racism,” Billoo said.

Billoo added that CAIR was concerned about an increase in Islamophobia following the onset of the Israeli genocide in Gaza, which has “increased to levels we hadn’t seen before”.

According to CAIR’s latest civil rights report, the organisation received a record 8,658 complaints in 2024, the highest since it began compiling data in 1996.

The report attributed the surge to what it called “the US-backed Gaza genocide”, which “drove a wave of Islamophobia in the United States”, with complaints spanning employment discrimination, education, law enforcement encounters and hate crimes.

The US human rights group Common Dreams’ new report, Solidarity as a Crime, released this month, paints a stark picture of what it calls a “nationwide campaign to silence solidarity” with Palestinians across the United States, citing censorship, arrests, campus crackdowns and deportations targeting pro-Palestinian advocacy.

‘Wholly inadequate’ UK response

The UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) told Al Jazeera it is “providing consular assistance” and is “in touch with local authorities and his family”.

But Soumaya described the response as “wholly inadequate”. She said US authorities are “blocking” FCDO officials from receiving information about why Hamdi’s visa was revoked.

“We’re talking about a British citizen with a valid US visa who has already been allowed to enter the United States,” she said. “The FCDO should recognise that this is really alarming.”

Five UK members of parliament, including former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, issued a statement last week calling on the government to secure consular access and demand Hamdi’s safe return.

The National Union of Journalists and International Federation of Journalists also called for his immediate release. Seamus Dooley, NUJ assistant general secretary, said there “is no evidence that, as a journalist, he is guilty of a terrorist offence, and he should be released”.

The Muslim Council of Britain urged the government to take “urgent diplomatic action”, saying, “Press freedom cannot be selective and we urge the British Government to come to the defence of its citizens being detained in this manner.”

Billoo emphasised the stakes extend beyond one individual. “If the United States government could treat an internationally renowned political analyst, journalist and British citizen in this way, we’re all forced to wonder: Are we safe? What can we say?”

The detention has devastated the family, his wife said. “Sami misses the kids when he’s travelling. He misses all of his family,” Soumaya said. “His mum and dad are extremely anxious and worried for his wellbeing, too.”

“You know, if you want him out of the country, just send him home,” she said, adding, “He has a family that miss him dearly and would be very happy for him to come home to. So what’s the reason for depriving him of his liberty and his freedom and keeping him locked up.”

 
Vance criticised European countries for failing to uphold free speech and then Plastic faced Loomer gets Hamdi arrested for speaking against her beloved Israel
 

British journalist says ICE detention was ‘attack on freedoms’ after 18-day ordeal in US​

London — A British journalist and political commentator detained by US immigration officers for more than two weeks warned of “an attack on the freedoms of ordinary Americans and citizens worldwide” as he returned to the UK Thursday.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had detained Sami Hamdi, a London-based father-of-three on October 26 at San Francisco International Airport. ICE stopped him the day after he addressed the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) California’s annual gala, while he was en route to Florida to speak at a similar event.

At the time, authorities told Hamdi he was being held after overstaying his US visa. However, Hamdi and his legal team said he was in the US on a valid visa and was detained for speaking out about Israel’s war in Gaza as “political retaliation.”

Hamdi recounted his 18 day ordeal to CNN shortly after his return to London.

“When I entered San Francisco airport to fly to Florida, I went through security. As I looked for my gate, D38 to Tampa, a man walked up to me and said… ‘your visa was revoked two days ago, so now you are here illegally.’”

Hamdi said the news came as a surprise, and he told the officials who had approached him that he had not been informed his visa was under review. He said he was then presented with a memo from the US State Department that said his visa had been revoked, without a reason as to why.

When asked about any evidence that would show that Hamdi had overstayed his visa on Thursday, State Department principal deputy spokesperson Tommy Pigott told CNN that he wasn’t able to speak on specific cases but said: “We’re going to enforce our immigration laws…We’re revoking visas when appropriate, in line with our national security.”

At the airport, Hamdi said he asked officers for an explanation for the revocation, saying that if there wasn’t one, he would just “book my ticket to London and fly home.”

He said the officers then told him: “‘That’s not the way this works here,’” before escorting him out of the terminal to a vehicle that was waiting for him.

Hamdi said he was told to get in the car, but initially refused, telling the officers: “With the greatest of respect, this looks like the movies. I’m not getting in any black car. I’m a British citizen. I have rights.”

Hamdi is known for his appearances on British TV, his analyses on Middle East developments, for his support of the Palestinian cause – and his criticism of Israel’s war in Gaza.

After advocating for a phone call, Hamdi, said he briefly spoke with CAIR, a Muslim civil liberties organization, before he was taken to an ICE facility over four hours away.

“They loaded me into a van with tight cuffs on my feet and on my hands, and they drove me four hours…and a half… I had to do a swap in the middle with a different car. And then they took me to the middle of nowhere,” he said.

At the detention center, Hamdi said he endured “harsh” conditions, alongside nearly 100 people in an overcrowded room.

Despite never being charged with a crime, Hamdi said he was kept in shackles in for-profit facilities with little oversight.

“The reality is that those those facilities are dehumanizing to the human beings (there), and when you look at the stories of the other inmates, it only breaks your heart,” he said, recounting multiple stories of fathers with green cards who had been detained without charge.

“It’s not that the courts won’t find them innocent, it’s that it seems there’s a concerted effort to make sure they do not go in front of a judge,” he said.

DHS did not respond to CNN’s query on Hamdi’s claims about his time in ICE detention Thursday but Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin reiterated an earlier statement that said: “Under President Trump, those who support terrorism and undermine American national security will not be allowed to work or visit this country.”

“I want to say that this wasn’t just an attack on me. It was an attack on the freedoms of ordinary Americans and citizens worldwide. It was an attack on their freedom to speak the truth in the face of hatred,” Hamdi said shortly after he returned back to the UK.

Hamdi first came under fire after speaking at an event in London in 2023 following the Hamas-led October 7 attacks. There, he told his audience not to pity Palestinians but rather to “celebrate the victory,” in remarks from a speech that he told CNN were taken out of context.

In a speech the following year hosted by the Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council, he said that “no one is saying October 7 was right.”

“My argument was that we have to solve the issue of the rights of the Palestinians. We have to solve the issue of occupation, apartheid, and that will bring peace to the region,” he said.

“I think that the reason that my visa was targeted was not because of anything that I was saying but it was because Americans were listening,” he said Thursday.

“Public opinion is shifting because people are seeing the truth,” he added, alluding to growing awareness of suffering in Gaza.

An independent UN inquiry concluded in September that Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. Israel has firmly denied accusations of genocide.

Laura Loomer, a conservative American activist with a direct line to Trump, said in late October that Hamdi’s detention had come after she had applied “relentless pressure” on the State Department and DHS. She accused Hamdi of being a supporter of Hamas. CAIR has accused Loomer of being an “anti-Muslim extremist.”

Hamdi said his “detention was a stark demonstration that a Muslim journalist can be held captive because extremists, amplified on social media, seek to weaponize state policy against inconvenient speech.”

Hamdi is one of the latest pro-Palestinian foreign nationals whose visas were revoked by the Trump administration. Earlier this year, Cornell graduate student Momodou Taal had his visa revoked and was targeted for deportation. The dual UK-Gambian citizen has accused the Trump administration of targeting him for participating in pro-Palestinian protests amid the war. In late March, Taal announced he would voluntarily leave the US.

Civil rights organizations have criticized the actions of the Trump administration, saying that they violate free speech protections, which apply to anyone who is legally in the US, regardless of citizenship status.

Hussam Ayloush, CAIR California CEO, said in a Thursday statement Hamdi’s detention should “alarm anyone who cares about the rule of law.”

While Hamdi said he is mulling whether to sue US authorities, he also said he would rather take what he considers a win, and instead “celebrate” the decisions of the “cool heads” in the US State Department and federal court system.

“I won this case, the extremists failed to silence my voice, they failed to remove my freedom of speech. America stood with me,” he said, adding that he was looking forward to spending time with his family and a game of soccer over the weekend.

While he said he is grateful for the global attention brought to his case, he also implied that he is keen to exit the limelight.

“I am not the story,” he added. “The story is one of the most heinous genocides of our time. The story is about kids who had their heads blown off. The story is about kids who had their legs blown off. The story is about innocent women and children who were bombed into oblivion for crimes they did not commit,” he said.

 
Back
Top