Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) Allowed to Leave South Africa, Barred From Re-Entry

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Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) Allowed to Leave South Africa, Barred From Re-Entry
After he “unreservedly apologized” for attempting to travel with a “world passport”
http://pitchfork.com/news/69995-yas...d-to-leave-south-africa-barred-from-re-entry/
http://qz.com/843687/rapper-mos-def...his-arrest-for-traveling-on-a-world-passport/

Mos Def’s ideals about a world without borders have been dashed by South African immigration officials. The Department of Home Affairs declared the rapper and actor an “undesirable person” on Nov. 22 after he tried to leave the country using a world passport, an idealistic travel document issued by a pacifist organization promoting a world without borders.

Mos Def, who was born and raised in Brookyn, NY, and who now goes by Yasiin Bey, was arrested in January when he tried to travel to Ethiopia from the Cape Town International Airport using the world passport. Released on bail and due to stand trial, Bey apologized to the Department of Home Affairs, the department said in a statement. The government department accepted his apology, but will no longer allow him the visa-free travel American citizens enjoy to South Africa.

The passport at the center of the rapper’s immigration debacle was issued by the World Service Authority, a Washington DC-based non-profit that advocates a world free of borders. Positioned as a World Government of World Citizens, the organization was founded in 1953 by Garry Davis, a World War II bomber aircraft pilot who became disillusioned by bordered nation states and their conflicts. The service also has commissions dealing with portfolios any other government would, like energy and education, but it’s unclear if any government recognizes the group.

Today, a million people use the passport, including refugees and stateless persons, according to the organization. Edward Snowden has been issued a world passport. Bey’s confusion is somewhat understandable: On its website, the World Service Authority insists that South Africa has accepted the passport, posting images of world passports that have been issued South African visas.

The document may be scoffed at as a fantasy, but it raises real questions about citizenship and borders. If recognized, it represents a real alternative for displaced people and those rejected by their own governments for a myriad of issues, including identity and religion. The passport is based on the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 13 on the rights to leave and return from any country. But the world and its borders have become more complex since the end of the second World War.

In a world increasingly rejecting globalization through convoluted visa processes, popular votes like the UK’s Brexit referendum, and support for building border walls, the idea of a world passport is unlikely to gain wide legitimacy. And of course the passport’s idealism does not seem to offer any security checks to safeguard against global conflict and terror.

For his part, a representative for Bey told Foreign Policy that he chose to use the passport because “it’s more representative of his personal ideals and philosophies…of the world as being a unified place a place without borders or boundaries.” The rapper has been living in South Africa on and off since 2013 and was also accused of allowing his family to stay even after their visas expired.

As part of the agreement with the government, the rapper will leave South Africa today (Nov. 22) using his American passport, and in exchange the department will withdraw charges against him by Friday, Nov. 25. Bey may not return unless the country’s Department of Home Affairs grants him a special waiver.

During his court battle, Bey released the now prophetic freestyle rap “No more parties in S.A.”, about his arrest and run-in with South African officials:

Hey Home Affairs, I don’t need to stay/I’ll leave and I’ll stay away/I never committed no crime no place. Why these police up in my face/Why they lay in place/ Why I don’t feel safe/This is not an expression of fear/This is just to make things clear/My intentions were pure in coming here/And as for everything I love and hold dear/Homies in the building/So is my wife and my children/ I’ve committed no crime/Why is the state wasting my time?/They must be out of they minds/I’ll forgive them/That’s the spirit of divine/I just want to go where I’m wanted.

 


tumblr_mm10pycDN41r961bco1_500.jpg
 
He a fake militant I always would see him trying to get women back to his hotel. He made an ass of himself on Real time too
 
They gave Mos Def closing time at the club treatment: "you don't have to go home, but you gotta get the hell outta here"
 
DADDY IS ‘DEF’ BEHIND – RAPPER $HORTS KIDS
http://nypost.com/2006/02/15/daddy-is-def-behind-rapper-horts-kids/


Mos Def is most definitely coming up short on his child support.

The actor and rapper yesterday said he is doing his best to make the $10,000 monthly payment to his estranged wife, but business problems and obligations to his other children have left him in a bind.

After Mos Def, whose real name is Dante Smith, filed for divorce from his wife Maria Yepes-Smith, a judge ordered him to pay $10,000 monthly to support their 7- and 8-year-old daughters.

Since the order went into effect Jan. 1., Mos Def has come up short both times, by about $2,000.

“It’s the best he can do under the circumstances,” said Steven Goldfeder, Mos Def’s attorney, during a hearing in Brooklyn Supreme Court. “He has several children. He’s always provided for them.”

Mos Def, a Brooklyn native, has three other children, the lawyer said.

Though Mos Def declined to comment after the hearing, the rapper had a hard time staying quiet in front of the judge.

“I’m the only person who’s providing for my children,” Mos Def said after Judge Sarah Krauss asked his lawyer why the performer wasn’t complying with the order.

The “Def Poetry Jam” host later interjected with several comments on the issue of home schooling. Goldfeder said his client’s payment should be reduced because Yepes-Smith reneged on a promise to home school the girls.

“Please tell your client not to talk anymore,” said Krauss, who also told the lawyer to file an amended claim that specifies grounds for divorce.

Krauss also chided Mos Def and his lawyer for not filing papers sooner.

Yepes-Smith declined to comment on the divorce proceedings, but her lawyer, Karen Blaustein, expressed doubts about Mos Def’s alleged business problems.

“I’ve been seeing him in these commercials with Bruce Willis for his new movie,” Blaustein said. “I’m sure he made enough money to pay his child support for his 7- and 8-year-old daughters.

Mos Def is starring in a new action thriller, “16 Blocks,” set for release next month. He plays a witness fighting for his life as he prepares to testify in a corruption case.


Yasiin Bey/Mos Def Not Banned From US, But Avoiding Child Support and Taxes?
http://genius.com/discussions/83154...-from-us-but-avoiding-child-support-and-taxes

Years before the name change, however, Mos was in court for failing to pay child support to his estranged wife, Maria Yepes-Smith. As New York Post reported it, he was required to pay $10,000 a month to support the couple’s two daughters, a sum Bey said he couldn’t afford due to business woes and care for his other kids.

But all things considered, it seems unlikely that any of the aforesaid situations would result in him being barred from the country. So the question remains, what actually prompted his expatriation to South Africa?

Shortly after the Bey news broke online, REVOLT reached out to an unnamed source to clarify what exactly took place. While most of the conversation was kept off the record, the source did confirm that the rapper is not actually banned from the U.S.

Soon after, a report out of South Africa’s Times Live, confirmed the same. “US Ban Is Mos Def-initely Untrue,” read the article’s headline.

Times Live reportedly got in contact with Bey’s longtime friend Abdi “Whosane” Hussein, who is also a resident of Cape Town. “[Mos Def] has never attempted to enter any country and been refused. It’s a complete lie,” said Hussein. “In fact, if there was anything criminal against you, they would invite you back so they could lock you up.”
 
Africans come to America and think they can outsmart African-Americans.

African-Americans go to Africa and think they can outsmart Africans.
You feel special in your homeland whether African or American.

Circle of life.
 
so she is getting 8k a month instead of 10...for two kids....and folk saying he ain't taking care of his kids....really?
That article was from Feb 15, 2006 (the date is even in the URL) immediately after the child support order started on Jan 1, 2006. At the time the article was written he had only made TWO payments both were late and both were 20% short and the ex went to court because Mos was threatening to flee the country with his second family (the divorce wasn't even final yet!) and stop all child support payments - which he eventually did. I don't have a strong dog in this "fight" either way but seriously, though... did you actually read ANY of the links provided?
:puzzled:
 
That article was from Feb 15, 2006 (the date is even in the URL) immediately after the child support order started on Jan 1, 2006. At the time the article was written he had only made TWO payments both were late and both were 20% short and the ex went to court because Mos was threatening to flee the country with his second family (the divorce wasn't even final yet!) and stop all child support payments - which he eventually did. I don't have a strong dog in this "fight" either way but seriously, though... did you actually read ANY of the links provided?
:puzzled:
Props, I had a misunderstanding also.
 
Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) Slates Final U.S. Performances at the Apollo Theater and Kennedy Center
http://www.billboard.com/articles/c...siin-bey-mos-def-final-us-performances-apollo

The rap icon’s retirement run kicks off Dec. 21.

In the wake of being permitted to leave South Africa today (Nov. 22) after violating local immigration laws earlier this year, hip-hop legend yasiin bey (formerly known as Mos Def) has partnered with the Apollo Theater and The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to present his final U.S. performances. The special engagements will begin with a Dec. 21 show at Harlem, New York’s Apollo. Then bey will head to Washington, D.C. for a Dec. 31-Jan. 2, 2017 New Year’s Eve celebratory run at the Kennedy Center.

At the top of 2016, the rapper/activist/actor announced his plans to retire from the music business. During his farewell appearances, bey will perform songs from a different album each night -- including The New Danger, True Magic, The Ecstatic and Black on Both Sides -- alongside new material, while each performance will feature surprise special guests. Additionally, the New Year’s Eve celebration at the Kennedy Center will feature a post-performance party in the Grand Foyer. The rapper's artwork, as well as that of other artists in his arts, culture and lifestyle collective A Country Called Earth (ACCE), will be anonymously displayed at both venues.

“We’re so excited to collaborate with the Kennedy Center on what will be a milestone moment in not only hip-hop history but also in popular culture,” said the Apollo Theater’s executive producer Kamilah Forbes in a statement. The bey performances mark the third collaboration between the Apollo Theater and the Kennedy Center. Prior shows include Harlem Nights/U Street Lights starring jazz pianist Jason Moran and Apollo Music Café: New Voices in Jazz featuring Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead.

For more details about bey’s final U.S. performances, visit www.apollotheater.org or www.kennedy-center.org.
 
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