Serial Muslim Blasphemer Diaa Muhammad to continue to run Blasphemy bill boards and now TV Commercials
The SPIN !!!!
Hollywood actor Serag Mohamed starts Australian Muslim Party with his brother
Miles Godfrey and Ian Walker
November 19, 2015 12:00am
THE director of the new Australian Muslim Party is a prison officer who moved to Hollywood and became a movie actor — including a recent role as an insurgent in the Iraq War.
The party’s founder, meanwhile, faces possible disciplinary action from NSW Fair Trading over an unpaid $40,000 debt to radio station 2GB.
Diaa Mohamed, 33, launched the Australian Muslim Party this week in the wake of the Paris terror attacks, promising to give Muslims a new voice by fielding Senate candidates at the next federal election.
Mr Mohamed’s brother Serag, an actor and NSW corrections officer, is listed on Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) documents as the sole director and secretary of the organisation’s vehicle; The Australian Muslim Party Pty Ltd.
Serag Mohamed’s professional online profile says he worked as a prison guard at a maximum-security jail before moving to Los Angeles in 2012 and has featured in a number of movies and TV programs.
In one recent film, Devil Dogs, he plays an insurgent during the Iraq War.
Serag’s mother confirmed yesterday that he is back working as a NSW corrections officer and a uniform was hanging on a washing line at their property in Panania.
Diaa Mohamed said his brother has no involvement in the Australian Muslim Party and will be removed from its official registration documents.
The Australian Muslim Party Pty Ltd was registered with ASIC last week but the party needs to have 500 members before it can be formally registered as a political entity.
It emerged yesterday that one of Diaa Mohamed’s previous ventures, My Peace Incorporated, was declared insolvent and forced into liquidation after it failed to pay 2GB $40,085.87 for advertising that the radio station carried in 2013.
Fair Trading is considering disciplinary action against Diaa Mohamed linked to My Peace’s unpaid debts.
“NSW Fair Trading is making inquiries into the association’s operations, functions, and activities and is currently considering disciplinary action,” a spokesman said.
The non-profit My Peace organisation was set up in 2011 to counter “misconceptions about Islam” and launched controversial billboards declaring “Jesus, a Prophet of Islam” across Sydney. Its website offers free Korans and other Islamic literature.
The Supreme Court appointed a liquidator to wind up My Peace Incorporated, which had charitable taxation status, in October 2014 after being petitioned by 2GB’s owners.
Justice Paul Brereton declared My Peace Incorporated insolvent after hearing evidence that it had no money and that a payment instalment process negotiated with 2GB’s owners was not complied with.
A liquidator was appointed to wind up My Peace Incorporated — a process that has not yet been completed.
A second entity, My Peace Pty Ltd, which Diaa Mohamed was listed as the sole director of, was deregistered by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission in May. It was the subject of a “strike off action” by ASIC.
Mr Mohamed said the company deregistration was an administrative matter and that My Peace Pty Ltd would be re-registered.
He admitted owing 2GB $40,000 and said My Peace “fell on hard times”.
Asked if he owed money to other companies, he replied: “I was told of something this morning that I wasn’t aware of and I’m going to chase it down. I think it was a matter of $2000.”
Mr Mohamed vowed to repay any outstanding creditors. “It will be rectified,” he added.