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Judge Allows Asylum Hearing for Sheika to Proceed in Secret

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From Associated Press

The asylum hearing for a Bahraini sheika who used forged documents to enter the United States can go forward in secret, a federal judge has ruled.

Two newspapers and two TV stations had sought access to the hearing for Meriam Al-Khalifa, 19, who fled to the United States a year ago to marry a U.S. Marine.

Al-Khalifa applied for political asylum on the grounds that she faces persecution for marrying a non-Muslim if she returns to Bahrain, a small Persian Gulf island-state. Her husband, Jason Johnson, requested and was granted an administrative discharge from the Marines.

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Wednesday’s decision by U.S. District Judge Rudi Brewster did not elaborate on the reasons for the secrecy.

The ruling was not entirely unfavorable to the plaintiffs--the San Diego Union-Tribune, the North (San Diego) County Times and television stations KGTV and KNSD. The judge released some documents pertaining to Al-Khalifa’s immigration case and said the final decision about her asylum status will be made public in a limited way.

Guylyn Cummins, the attorney for the media organizations, said no decision had been made about whether to appeal.

Al-Khalifa’s attorney, Jan Bejar, welcomed the ruling as protection for his client.

“This is a sensitive case,” he said. “There are serious issues of security. My client has a reason to be fearful.”

Johnson, 25, met Al-Khalifa last year at a mall in Bahrain, where he was assigned to a security unit.

As his deployment was ending last year, he forged U.S. military documents that she used to fly to the United States on a commercial airplane. Immigration officials in Chicago discovered the ruse.

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An immigration judge in July ordered Al-Khalifa to face charges of illegally entering the United States, which could lead to her deportation.

Al-Khalifa’s father is a cousin of Bahrain’s head of state.

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