Syrian man sentenced to seven years for illegal border crossing

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In a non-binding sentence on Wednesday, the Szeged court of justice sentenced Ahmed H., a Syrian man, to seven years in prison for illegal border crossing and complicity to “acts of terror” during a riot of migrants at the Serbia-Hungary border in September 2015.

Probation is possible only after he has completed at least two thirds of the prison sentence. Ahmed H was also expelled from Hungary for 10 years.

The procedure held in the southern Hungarian city was a retrial after a judge ruled that available evidence had not been assessed properly in the first trial.

The prosecutor, Ferenc Szanka, proposed a sentence of just under seventeen and a half years. He also proposed that the court should uphold the original decision to permanently expel the Syrian from Hungary.

The prosecutor insisted that a telephone seized from Ahmed H, who had lived in Cyprus before his arrest, included recordings linked to terrorist organisations. The authorities in Cyprus said he was a dangerous religious fanatic, he added.

Ahmed H’s defence lawyer told the court it should consider charges of attempted violence against an official rather than terrorism. He also noted the defendant had served a substantial length of time in pre-trial detention and this should be considered as time served. Péter Barandy insisted the defendant had thrown stones at police on the Hungarian border “out of desperation” and in a state of restricted judgement.

He said the Syrian man had held a passport, making him eligible to cross at any border station, but instead he had chosen to accompany his parents, his brother and his children who lacked them.

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