Palestinian student Mohsen Mahdawi calls him a “victory for democracy”



A student of Colombia and a pro -Palestinian activist Mohsen Mahdawi described his last launch from the detention of migration and customs enforcement (ICE) as a “victory for democracy.”

Mahdawi narrated the day he was detained by the federal immigration authorities in mid -April while he was in an naturalization interview to become an American citizen.

He wrote in an article published by the New York Times on Friday: “The Ministry of Internal Security plan did not go smoothly, as we missed the trip to Louisiana minutes.” “I changed these few minutes the course of my legal case, and in the end I led to the liberation from detention because I managed to struggle for my rights on a fair basis.”

Mahdawi added: “Unlike other students who continue to breastfeed in the reservation of immigration and customs, I got a” concession “to search for justice while they are not in prison.

He was released from the detention on Wednesday after the provincial judge, Jeffrey Kraovord, was in the interest of the public, the owner of the green card, to release him. He was held in the northwestern correctional facility in St. Albanz, VT.

Mahdi is the first international student to be resulted from the seizure of President Trump’s campaign to immigrate and revenge the demonstrations in support of the Palestinians on the campus of universities. The White House looked at its deportation and other demonstrators, on the pretext that they were actively undermining the American foreign policy.

In his article, the student said he “did not lose hope.”

“Despite spending 16 nights in the prison cell, I did not lose hope in the inevitability of justice and the principles of democracy.” “I wanted to become a citizen in this country because I believe in the principles that he devotes.”

He added that his freedom is “intertwined with the freedom of other students, who practiced the same rights of freedom of expression that I had not been subjected to in prison, and intertwined with the freedom of the Palestinians, who are fighting for their right to life and justice, too.”

Mahdi also argued that by trying to deport him, the Trump administration’s message is that there is no “opposition room, freedom of exact expression.”

“It appears that he is ready to protect an extremist Israeli government from criticism at the expense of constitutional rights, with the possibility of a peaceful future for both Palestinians and Israelis, a future that is free of shock and fear,” said a student of Colombia University.

During another recent interview, Mahdi said that the United States is the first country in which freedom is offered. In an article on Friday, he indicated that these freedoms themselves are “attack” today.

“Once the opposition’s suppression, in the name of security, becomes a major target for a government, authoritarian rule, and even martial law is not far away,” Mahdawi wrote.

The student added, “When they look at my case, all Americans must ask themselves: What remains of our democracy, and who will be targeted after that?”

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