The UK Foreign Secretary has ordered an urgent review after βserious information failuresβ led to a British-Egyptian activist being allowed into the country despite posting anti-Semitic and anti-British tweets.
Yvette Cooper announced the investigation after the British government was left embarrassed when it welcomed the arrival of Alaa Abd El Fattah, who had been jailed for years in Egypt.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer had tweeted his βdelightβ after the activist arrived in Britain last week, only for his official spokesman days later to express regret at Mr Abd El Fattahβs βabhorrentβ social media posts.
Mr Abd El Fattah's tweets called for Zionists, police and white people to be killed, described British people as βdogs and monkeysβ and urged Londoners to burn down Downing Street.
The government claims that successive prime ministers were not briefed on the historic tweets, which date back as far as 2010, and civil servants in charge of the case were also unaware of them.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer initially said he was 'delighted' at the activist's arrival. PA
The Egyptian-born activist on Monday issued an βunequivocalβ apology for the βshocking and hurtfulβ posts he made a decade ago, but also argued that some had been βcompletely twistedβ.
Announcing the investigation, Ms Cooper said current Labour and former Conservative ministers βwere never briefed on these tweetsβ and civil servants in charge of the case βwere also unawareβ.
βI take this extremely seriously, both to ensure we have accurate information and because of the deep distress this has understandably caused,β she said in a letter to the Foreign Affairs Committee on Monday night.
βIt is clear that this has been an unacceptable failure
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