By
Daily Mail Reporter
U.S. border guards got a surprise when they searched a Mexican BMW
and found a hardline Muslim cleric - banned from France and Canada -
curled up in the boot.
Said Jaziri, who called for the death of a
Danish cartoonist that drew pictures of the prophet Mohammed, was being
smuggled into California when he was arrested, along with his driver
Kenneth Robert Lawler.
The 43-year-old was deported from Canada to
his homeland Tunisia in 2007 after it emerged he had lied on his
refugee application about having served jail time in France.
Asylum: Jaziri had allegedly paid a
Tijuana-based smuggling group $5,000 to get him across the border near
Tecate, saying he wanted to be taken to a 'safe place anywhere in the
U.S.'
His fire and brimstone sermons and rabble-rousing antics catapulted
him into the public eye during his short tenure as imam at a Montreal
mosque.
He branded homosexuality a disease and led protests over
cartoonist Kurt Westergaard's illustrations poked fun at Islam and were
published in a Danish newspaper in 2006.
He also caused anger when he campaigned for a bigger mosque to accommodate Montreal's burgeoning Muslim population.
Caught: Jaziri was arrested being smuggled across the San Diego border crossing, along with his driver Kenneth Robert Lawler
But after his deportation he complained that he had been physically and
mentally tortured during the 13-hour flight repatriating him to Tunisia,
a claim Canadian authorities deny.
He was being held as a material witness in the criminal case against Mr Lawler, who has been charged with
immigrant smuggling.
Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard sparked controversy when his drawings of Mohammed appeared in a newspaper in 2006
Jaziri had allegedly paid a Tijuana-based smuggling cartel $5,000 to
take him across the border near Tecate, saying he wanted to be taken to a
'safe place anywhere in the U.S.'
According to the court documents, a Mexican guide led Jaziri and a Mexican immigrant over the border fence near Tecate.
They then trekked across the rugged terrain under cover of darkness
to a spot popular for drivers who pick up immigrants for smuggling runs
into San Diego.
He allegedly told officials he had flown from
Africa to Europe, then to Central America and Chetumal, Mexico, on the
Mexico-Belize border, where he took a bus to Tijuana.
Lise Garon, a professor of communications at Laval University in
Quebec City, told the Los Angeles Times: 'His nickname in Quebec was the
controversial imam.
'I think he was deported because people hated his ideas.'
His
case drew support from the Muslim community as well as Amnesty
International after he claimed he would be tortured if sent back to
Tunisia.
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