Muslim mayor from New Jersey denied entry into White House Eid event
by Rehan Qamar
While several people celebrated Eid and the diversity of Muslims in office on May 1 at the White House, a Muslim mayor from New Jersey was denied entrance to the celebration. Identified as Mohamed Khairullah, the mayor of Prospect Park, New Jersey, the local political alleges he was not allowed onto the White House grounds on Monday night.
Khairullah, the longest-serving Muslim mayor in New Jersey, told CBS News that he received a phone call around 2 p.m. from the White House telling him that his clearance was denied by the Secret Service and he would not be allowed to attend the event hosted by President Biden. A spokesman for the Secret Service confirmed with several news outlets that Khairullah was denied entry, but details as to why have not been shared.
“It’s disappointing and it’s shocking that this continues to happen under our Constitution which provides that everyone is innocent unless proven guilty. I honestly don’t know what my charge, if you want to put it that way, is at this point, to be treated in such a manner,” Khairullah told NorthJersey.com.
“I think right now my crime is my name,” he said, unaware of why he was denied entrance after being invited.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations issued a statement on Monday night calling the episode “wholly unacceptable and insulting.”
“Only months ago, Khairullah was praised by elected officials across the state as one of the longest serving Muslim mayors in the country, and the longest in New Jersey,” CAIR said in the statement. “Today, in an affront to the Muslim community and the American public at large, and in what could be perceived as a continued use of the secret watchlist, the Secret Service denied Mayor Khairullah entry, on the basis that he was not cleared by security.”
CAIR said Khairullah had helped the New Jersey Democratic Party compile a list of local Muslim leaders who could be invited.
According to The Associated Press, Khairullah was born in Syria. His family was displaced during Hafez al-Assad’s crackdowns in the 1980s, and they eventually fled from Saudi Arabia. He became a U.S. citizen in 2000 and was elected to his first term as the town’s mayor in 2001.
2023
5,569 views
views
0
comments