Peace activist and singer/songwriter
Cat Stevens is being deported from the US after being denied entry
because his name appeared on a security "watch list". A transatlantic
flight he was travelling on to Washington DC was diverted under FBI
orders and the former pop star was escorted from the plane. The
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) said the singer was denied
access to the US "on national security grounds" and would be returned
to Britain later today. But authorities have given no indication why
the Muslim convert - now known as Yusaf Islam - has been barred from
the country.
Passengers, including British pop veterans Marillion, were at first told the diversion was due to refuelling. Steve Hogarth, 45, of Marillion, said: "I (then) met a security guard who said the two people escorted off the plane were Cat Stevens and his daughter. I was really stunned. Everybody knows he converted to the Muslim faith. He is a pacifist and a songwriter."
(Meldung über skynews via E-Mail von Daniel)
Passengers, including British pop veterans Marillion, were at first told the diversion was due to refuelling. Steve Hogarth, 45, of Marillion, said: "I (then) met a security guard who said the two people escorted off the plane were Cat Stevens and his daughter. I was really stunned. Everybody knows he converted to the Muslim faith. He is a pacifist and a songwriter."
(Meldung über skynews via E-Mail von Daniel)
Ach, Steve. Really stunned? Den "songwriter" haben sie ihm eben noch vergeben...
Jedoch hat die Berliner Zeitung heute immerhin insofern zur Erhellung beigetragen, als sie meldete, Yusuf Islam habe 1996 den Mordaufruf gegen Salman Rushdie unterstützt (hier). Verdunkelnd dagegen die Einleitung des Artikels: "Ist der Sänger Cat Stevens - der Mann, der 'Morning has broken' geschrieben hat - ein potenzieller Terrorist?" - Es ist und bleibt ein unausrottbares, nichtsdestotrotz aber falsches Gerücht, Cat Stevens habe "Morning has broken" geschrieben. Der wahre Autor, Eleanor Farjeon, hat den Text vor 1933 zu der Melodie einer gälischen Volksweise gedichtet, die mindestens aus dem 19. Jahrhundert stammt.
Wer will, kann es als pikant befinden: Dass Cat Stevens' populärster Song, mit dem er erhebliches Geld verdient hat, das später unter anderem der Hamas zu Gute kam (siehe Berliner Zeitung oben) die radiogängige Vertonung eines - - - christlich-geistlichen Liedes ist.

