Italian authorities have deported on national security grounds a radical Moroccan cleric who called one of his daughters Jihad.
Mohammed Madad was collected by police from his home in the northeast town of Noventa Vicentina and put on a flight for Morocco from Rome's main airport late Tuesday.
Madad, a 52-year-old father of four was banned from re-entering Italy for the next 15 years.
The firebrand cleric's sermons became increasingly violent and anti-Western with the aim of indoctrinating youngsters with radical Salafite ideology, according to anti-terrorism investigators.
Madad was capable of international terrorism, according to the investigators.
A probe was opened into Madad after police received several tip-offs from the public, investigators said.
Earlier this year, Madad was appointed imam of a mosque and Islamic centre in Noventa Vicentina, which has a sizeable Muslim community.
Madad previously worked in a local food factory and had tried to open a halal butchers, according to investigators.
Close to 100 terrorism suspects have been expelled from Italy since the beginning of 2015, according to interior minister Angelino Alfano.
Following the recent spate of attacks in France and Germany, Italy is on 'level two' terror alert, the highest possible in the absence of a direct attack.