Five children, four grandchildren, a wife and a sister.
The terror-sentenced Said Mansour, who today was put on a plane to Morocco, which expelled from Denmark for good, leaving a large family in Denmark.
The 11 members of the family are all Danish citizens.
Four of his children are adults, aged 23 to 33 years old, while his youngest daughter is three years.
His third wife, a moroccan woman, as he was islamic married in July 2013, was pregnant during a visit in prison, where Said Mansour sat, and she gave birth to a daughter in October 2015.
the Birth occurred three months after The high Court sentenced Said Mansour four years in prison for terror-propaganda for al-Qaida.
He was deprived of his Danish nationality and was expelled him for good, a judgment which the Supreme court upheld the 8. June 2016.
When Said Mansour lands in Morocco, it is the first time since 1989, he puts his feet on home soil. He has in the past tried to renounce his moroccan citizenship, but Morocco has rejected.
In 2006, desiring Morocco for his extradition for prosecution in a terror-related case, and the question now is whether Morocco will resume the criminal case or about Denmark in the secret has scored a political agreement with Morocco, Said Mansour did not suffer any harm or being imprisoned.
the Application in 2006 was rejected by the Danish ministry of justice. According to the application, having Said Mansour prosecuted for the ‘formation of a criminal gang’, ‘participation in a premeditated attempted murder as well as for participation in an attempt at vandalism against public institutions by the use of explosives’.
the Charges could be punished with up to life in prison or the death penalty, which, however, has not been executed in Morocco since 1993.
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In 1990, it was Said Mansour photographed on Storebæltsfærgen along with “The Blind Sheik”, Omar Abdel-Rahman, who in 1996 got a life sentence in New York for terror. He died in prison in 2017. Photo: Finn Frandsen
Said the Mansours family in Morocco, living in Casablanca. His father died 60 years old in 1985, while his mother, 74, is allegedly still living.
He has five brothers and sisters in Morocco, which he has kept in telephone contact with. Both his mother and several of his siblings have been visiting Said Mansour in Denmark.
Said Mansour ended up in Denmark, because he is having a vacation here in the country, and met a Danish woman in 1983, as he was married by 30. in march 1988, where he also received a Danish citizenship.
the Couple had four children, born respectively in 1985, 1986, 1992 and 1994, but divorced in 1999, and in 2000 he got a new wife, a moroccan.
the Marriage was mediated through the family, but the wife moved back to Morocco in 2005, and the couple was divorced in april 2015.
But already in 2013 was Said Mansour has been islamically married to a moroccan woman with Danish citizenship. They lived together, before he in 2014, was remanded in custody in the new terrorsag.
His islamic wife became pregnant and gave birth to a daughter, while Said Mansour was imprisoned. But the little child made no impression on either The high Court or the Supreme court, which denied that the expulsion would violate his right to a family life:
the Supreme court writes in the judgment: ‘What, in particular, his family situation, notes the Supreme court, he has not had a genuine family life with (the wife, red), that their daughter is conceived after byrettens judgment, and that his other children are adults and can take care of themselves.’
The first year in Denmark had Said Mansour short appointments at a lakridsfabrik, as hospital assistant, rengøringsmand and in a nursing home.
He operated from 1986 to 1992 an islamic bookstore, where his wife also worked, but the business got bankrupt in 1992, and since has Said Mansour not been linked to the labour market, but has been on social assistance.
over the Years, he has instead used to agitate for jihad and islamic terrorism. When his Danish nationality came into play during his recent criminal trial, he stated in a police report:
‘I’m a Danish citizen. Denmark is my country, I have no relationship to Morocco, I have not been there since 1989. If I get expelled, it becomes the imprisonment, torture and death.’
Sources: Domsudskrifter from the Court of Frederiksberg 4. december 2014, the Eastern high Court 1. July 2015, and the Supreme court 8. June 2016.