A Muslim man who was due to fly out on his honeymoon with his pregnant wife said he was taken off the plane and questioned over terrorism because of his faith and his beard.

Ahmed Ali was supposed to fly to Marrakesh, Morocco, from Manchester Airport, but was told by staff on the Thomson flight he had to disembark.

Mr Ali, 39, of Derby, said he was then taken away and questioned for several hours by Greater Manchester Police Officers.

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Ahmed Ali, 39, pictured, said he feels 'victimised' after being taken off the Thomson flight to Marrakech

He said it was the 20th time in two years he has been questioned when trying to board a plane, but the first time he was forced to get off.

He told the Derby Telegraph: 'I was on the plane and watching a video and my wife was chatting to the people next to her. We were really looking forward to the holiday because it was a late honeymoon for us.

'I was then tapped on the shoulder by a member of staff who said you need to leave the plane. I asked three times - 'why?'. She said the police are outside waiting for you.

Mr Ali, of Derby, said he would be making a complaint against the airline and Greater Manchester Police

Mr Ali recorded a video, pictured, on YouTube and Facebook, branding David Cameron 'today's Hitler'

'I asked why have you taken me off the flight. They said follow us and said they would interview me under section seven of the terrorism act.'

Mr Ali, a property developer now working with his millionaire father Zamir, 59, regularly flies to the Middle East and Europe for business and holidays.

He said he was recently questioned before boarding a flight at Heathrow with his mother and that he previously accepted officers were just doing their job.

But after the latest incident the charity worker said he wanted to take a stand and hoped he was arrested and taken to court so he could prove there was wrongdoing.

He added: 'I'm so upset about it. What they did was wrong and I think it is purely because I am Muslim and have a beard.'

In an online rant he compared David Cameron to Hitler and said he was 'oppressing the Muslim people'.

Mr Ali, pictured, compared David Cameron to Hitler in a video recorded shortly after the incident

He said: 'I'm no threat to anyone. The only person who is a threat is David Cameron and his bigotry.

'Hitler was an oppressive and a bad person to the Jews and to people in General. Today's Hitler is David Cameron.

'So I encourage all of you brothers and sisters, and I'm sure there are lots of you that have this problem, to stand up for your rights.

He added: 'I feel sorry for all those people who fought in World War One and World War Two; all those ex servicewomen and men who gave their lives to uphold freedom, liberty, democracy and all the things David Cameron talks about but takes no action [over].'

On the video, which he posted to YouTube and Facebook, he said he refused to answer police questions because he was so angry at being removed from the plane.

He said: 'I said to them I'm not answering anything. I said 'I've had enough'. Three weeks ago I was stopped with my mum. They insulted my mum, they insulted me, and for what?

'Because I've got a beard. It's supposed to be in fashion; everybody has a beard but you don't see white people getting stopped.'

In the video, which has more than 389,000 views, he said he felt he had been 'stripped' of his rights as a British citizen.

He added: 'I was born in this country. As a kid I was told I had freedom of expression, freedom of this, freedom of that...I've got nothing to hide, so why couldn't they come to me before? Come to my house or give me a call. Email me. Twitter me.

'But they let me go through security. I was checked in and cleared; the full works. I've sat on my plane, it's about to fly and they remove me from it. So I won't answer their questions and I encourage everyone to not answer their questions.'

Speaking in an interview on the BBC, he said he was a frequent flyer who 'liked to fill up his jumbo passport'.

He said the incident at Manchester Airport, pictured, was the 20th time in two years he has been questioned by police before boarding flights at British airports

He said: 'I explained that I was British. I'm a British Muslim. I go out and feed the homeless in Britain - white people. I've been to Cumbria to help people. Before all of this; I've been doing it for seven or eight years.

'Any sane person knows right is right, and wrong is wrong.'

Mr Ali said he has recently been inundated with racist comments on his Facebook page alleging he is a terrorist with several wives, claims he strongly denies.

He added his wife has had panic attacks since the incident and he plans to make formal complaints against the airline and police because he feels victimised.

Mr Ali said he had been stopped at 20 airports by police and intelligence officers since 2012.

He married his wife Sarah, 27, in December and they paid £1,800 for a week-long honeymoon to Morocco when they were stopped at Manchester Airport.

Mr Ali is divorced and has two children with his first wife.

He said: 'The first time I was stopped was at Birmingham Airport when I returned from Pakistan in 2012.

'My father was visiting family near Islamabad and fell ill. I went over to look after him and on my return to Britain I was stopped by police and MI5.

'I completely understood why I was being stopped and complied with everything. I told them why I was in Pakistan and they apologised and released me.

'Since then I have been stopped at Heathrow Airport, Birmingham Airport and Manchester Airport.

'I go regularly to Sharm el-Sheikh with my family for cheap holidays and I've also been to Saudia Arabia on pilgrimage to Mecca three times.

'In recent years I have been flying to Europe a lot looking for potential property investments. I've been to Poland, Germany and Holland.

Mr Ali, a property developer, pictured left and right, said he flies to Europe and the Middle East frequently to scout out potential investments

'We haven't bought any property abroad but that is why I fly over to these places.

'I understand why I am being stopped, I get it and support the fact that the authorities have a job to do but I am being stopped in front of my children, my mum and my wife.

'This latest incident at Manchester has been the straw that broke the camel's back and I had to come out and say something.

'I have not had my money refunded by Thomson and the police say it's nothing to do with them. I don't need the money, I just want to be treated like everyone else.

'I'm a businessman, my father is a millionaire and pays for my trips away. The fact I get stopped even when I'm going on a cheap holiday with my family to Sharm el-Sheikh is just too much.'

Thomson Airways confirmed staff asked a customer to leave the aircraft on the flight from Manchester to Marrakesh at the request of the authorities.

Greater Manchester Police also confirmed a 39-year-old man was removed from the flight and questioned under the Counter Terrorism Act and subsequently released.

It comes just weeks after London's Mohammad Tariq Mahmood, 41, his brother and their children, aged between eight and 19, said they were stopped at the departure gate at Gatwick airport and told their visas to the US had been revoked.

He claimed the family were barred from flying 'because they are Muslim'.

It later emerged that a Facebook page linked to Taliban and Al Qaeda was registered to Mr Mahmood's address, which he insisted he had no knowledge of.