skipToContent
United KingdomAll policy

Anas al-Tikriti, British-Iraqi founder of Cordoba, denied entry to Canada

Middle East Eye United Kingdom
Anas al-Tikriti, British-Iraqi founder of Cordoba, denied entry to Canada
Anas al-Tikriti, British-Iraqi founder of Cordoba, denied entry to Canada Submitted by MEE staff on Thu, 05/14/2026 - 16:05 Tikriti had planned to speak at a Muslim Association of Canada convention in Toronto Anas al-Tikriti was denied entry to Canada this week (Screengrab/X) Off The British-Iraqi founder of the Cordoba Foundation, Anas al-Tikriti , was refused entry to Canada and held for hours at Montreal airport earlier this week. Tikriti had planned to speak at a Muslim Association of Canada convention in Toronto from 16 to 18 May, but was sent back to London after being interrogated for 11 hours on arrival. "For hours, officers asked me the very same questions I had already answered on my ETA [Electronic Travel Authorisation] form, including the absurd and insulting 'Have you ever been associated with narcotics, terrorist, or criminal groups?' There was no substance to any of it," Tikriti said in a statement. "No one asked about my views, my ideas, what I intended to say at the convention. Nothing. In fact, when at one point I offered to explain or clarify something, the officer made clear that he preferred if I didn’t. "It was clear to me within the first three hours that they had no intention of allowing me into Canada, and that the hours that followed were a search for a pretext. "By 4pm, the officer had found one. I could see it in his face the moment he decided to say it." Tikriti said the officer claimed he had incorrectly stated on his ETA application that he had never been denied a visa by another country, even though he had been refused a US visa in 2023. Op-Ed video: As a Muslim who's been debanked, why can't I get the same treatment as Farage? Read More » He added: "I maintain, unequivocally, that I could not have answered that question with a 'No'." Tikriti founded the Cordoba Foundation in 2005 to promote dialogue between the West and Islam. The foundation also advises politicians on strategy and security in the Middle East. In 2014, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where he spent his teenage years and early twenties, designated Cordoba a terrorist organisation. The Muslim Association of Britain said the Canadian government's decision to deny Tikriti entry appeared to be driven by "bad-faith pressure from those seeking to suppress voices speaking out against Israel’s crimes and the genocide in Gaza ". "It raises grave concerns about freedom of speech and the targeting of those advocating for Palestinian rights." In 2021, Tikriti learned that forensic investigators believed the UAE had hacked his iPhone using Pegasus, spyware developed by the Israeli company NSO Group that can turn mobile phones into military-grade surveillance devices. "I would, frankly, have had more respect for the Canadian immigration authorities had they simply said so. That they were under pressure not to admit me," Tikriti said in his statement. "That my views on Palestine were unacceptable to them. That my criticism of Israel’s crimes against humanity was intolerable." UK Politics News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0
Share
Original story
Continue reading at Middle East Eye
www.middleeasteye.net
Read full article

Summary generated from the RSS feed of Middle East Eye. All article rights belong to the original publisher. Click through to read the full piece on www.middleeasteye.net.