During the criminal process, the Hungarian government repeatedly called Ahmed “a terrorist” in an effort to persuade the public that refugees and migrants are threats to the country, instead of ordinary people in need of protection
After being imprisoned and then held in immigration detention in Hungary for more than four years, Syrian national Ahmed H. was finally allowed to return home to be reunited with his family in Cyprus in the early hours of this morning.
A case that Amnesty International has campaigned on for a long time, here’s the story of how Ahmed’s trip to help loved ones in need ended with him needing help thanks to Hungary’s draconian counter-terrorism law.
Ahmed is a Syrian national and a former long-term resident of Cyprus. His wife is a Cypriot national as are his two young daughters, who were born and have lived in the country all their lives.
In August 2015, Ahmed departed his family home in Cyprus on a special mission. Leaving his young family behind, he traveled to Turkey to help his elderly parents and six other family members escape war-ravaged Syria to find safety in Europe.
Around a month later, having successfully navigated their way out of Turkey, Ahmed and his family members found themselves among hundreds of refugees stranded at the Hungarian border, following President Orban’s decision to fence off the crossing from Serbia.
Clashes broke out as some refugees attempted to get through. Hungary’s police responded with tear gas and water cannon, injuring dozens. Some people threw stones, including Ahmed, but news footage also clearly shows him using a megaphone to call on both sides to remain calm.
Ahmed was one of eleven people arrested but was the only one charged under Hungary’s draconian counter-terrorism law.
During the criminal process, the Hungarian government repeatedly called Ahmed “a terrorist” in an effort to persuade the public that refugees and migrants are threats to the country, instead of ordinary people in need of protection.
In September 2018, a Hungarian court eventually found him guilty of “complicity in an act of terror”, under the country’s extremely vague counter-terrorism laws. While delivering the final judgement, the judge acknowledged that Ahmed had in fact tried to calm the situation and mediate between the police and the crowd. He was originally sentenced to 10 years in prison.
Following an appeal, a retrial was ordered in which he was again convicted and given a reduced sentence of five years in prison, despite a glaring lack of evidence to back up the extremely serious charge.
The United Nations, the European Parliament and the US State Department all expressed concern about Hungary’s deliberate misapplication of terrorism charges in Ahmed’s case.
Ahmed spent more than three years in prison and endured a long legal ordeal in the hope of being able to return to Cyprus. On 19 January 2019, he was released from prison and sent to a Hungarian immigration detention centre, after the authorities asked Cyprus to take him back.
For more than eight months, he languished in the detention centre waiting for the Cypriot authorities to decide his fate. During this time, Hungarian immigration officers approached him about being forcibly sent back to Syria, where he would have been at risk of serious human rights violations.
When the decision finally came through from Cyprus that he was cleared to return home, he had been separated from his wife and daughters for more than four years. He arrived in Larnaca airport in the early hours of 28 September 2019 for an emotional reunion with his family, home just in time for his elder daughter’s tenth birthday.
Tags: Hungary, Cyprus, Detention, Ahmed H.
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