It is not for the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

She rejected this Thursday a request to suspend the deportation measure to Morocco of Hassan Iquioussen, an imam officiating in France.

Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin announced last week the forthcoming expulsion of this preacher of Moroccan nationality.

Reputed to be close to the Muslim Brotherhood, he is accused by the French authorities of having launched calls for hatred and violence aimed in particular at the Jewish community.

The court, which sits in Strasbourg, was seized on Wednesday by the person concerned under article 39 of its rules, which allows it to order states "provisional measures" when the applicants are exposed to "a real risk of irreparable damage”.

Withdrawal of the residence permit

Hassan Iquioussen invoked the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights on the prohibition of torture and inhuman and degrading treatment, the right to respect for private and family life, freedom of thought, conscience and religion or freedom of expression.

According to the ECHR, Gérald Darmanin issued an expulsion order for this imam on Friday, withdrawing his residence permit as well as a second order fixing Morocco as the country of destination.

"Because of the seriousness of the threat to public order, the minister considered that there had not been a disproportionate attack on his right to family life", further specifies the ECHR.

“He has nothing to do on national soil”

Gérald Darmanin again justified the expulsion of this imam on CNews on Thursday, judging that he had made "openly anti-Semitic, openly xenophobic, openly homophobic, openly anti-women remarks".

He “has nothing to do on national soil”, insisted the Minister of the Interior.

Morocco, he announced on Tuesday, issued a "consular pass" to "expel manu militari" Hassan Iquioussen who lives in the North and is registered according to him in the "RPF", the file of wanted persons.

This preacher is very active on social networks, in particular on his YouTube channel followed by 169,000 people and his Facebook page with 42,000 subscribers.

Born in France, in Denain, and living near Valenciennes, Hassan Iquioussen, 57, had decided when he came of age, still according to Gérald Darmanin, not to opt for French nationality.

He claims to have given up French nationality at the age of 16 under the influence of his father, and then tried in vain to recover it.

Company

North: Morocco ready to welcome an imam threatened with expulsion

Policy

North: Gérald Darmanin himself announces the imminent expulsion of an imam

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