Times discovers that ‘Trojan horse’ letter is a crude forgery

New evidence raises doubts about extremist plot to take over school

By Dominic Kennedy, Greg Hurst and Ruth Gledhill

A letter at the centre of an alleged jihadist plot to take over schools contains errors that suggest it is a fake.

A fortnight ago it was revealed that Birmingham City Council had handed over papers to West Midlands Police purporting to show a plan by Muslim fundamentalists to take over state schools. The documents highlighted a five-step strategy, called Operation Trojan Horse, to remove unwanted head teachers in order to establish schools run on Islamic principles. The document appears to show that the conspirators were working to remove a primary school headmistress who was actually dismissed 20 years ago.

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Small Muslim community struggles with ‘terrorist’ rumors

KHOU Mahmoudberg reportBRAZORIA COUNTY, Texas — A small community in Brazoria County has been causing a big stir over rumors that it serves as an Islamic terrorist training camp.

The community, called Mahmoudberg, sits along County Road 3 near the town of Sweeny. When an 11 News crew asked to see the property on Monday afternoon, the request was politely declined at the gate.

But Freeport Police Chief Dan Pennington was recently there. “The best description would be just a trailer park in the country,” he said.

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UKIP’s alliance with extreme-right Islamophobes

EFD logoMembers of Nigel Farage’s political group in the European parliament have compared childbearing Muslim women to Osama bin Laden, spoken at a rally with the BNP’s Nick Griffin, and defended some of the far-right views of the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik.

Farage is facing a decision after the May elections over whether to keep Ukip in the Europe for Freedom and Democracy (EFD) group, an alliance of parties from different countries of which he is co-president, amid criticism of the extreme positions of some of its MEPs and examples of anti-Islam rhetoric on its website.

Ukip argues that all British political parties are forced to have “strange bedfellows” in Europe as it allows parties to qualify for more speaking time in the EU parliament. However, MEPs in any such alliance must have “political affinity” or risk being disbanded by the EU and losing their funding.

Some anti-Islam comments appear on the EFD’s own website. In one video, Magdi Cristiano Allam, an MEP from the I Love Italy party, is translated as saying that Islam is not a religion but an ideology “that preaches hatred, violence and death, but that is something we’re not allowed to say”. His comments are made in response to a speaker at an EFD “study day”, who argues against “caving in” to Muslims in Europe and warns of the threat of “Islamisation” of western society.

One politician in the EFD, Slavi Binev from Bulgaria, spoke at Ukip’s conference last year. An interview with Binev on his website says: “If Osama bin Laden symbolises the cruellest aspect of the Islam for the Americans, then the Muslim woman with her numerous children are his European equivalent.”

The group also contains Frank Vanhecke, a Belgian MEP, whose former party Vlaams Blok was disbanded after a court found it violated anti-racism legislation in 2002. Vanhecke, now an independent, appeared at a student rally with Griffin, the BNP leader, in 2010 and told the Guardian he believes “Islamisation” is a serious problem for Europe.

Another politician in the group is Morten Messerschmidt, a Danish MEP whose youth organisation was given a conviction for incitement to racial hatred in 2002 after it argued crime such as rape was a product of a multi-ethnic society.

Ukip’s biggest partners in the EFD group are the Italian Lega Nord, which is reportedly considering leaving the EFD after the May elections for a tie-up with Marine Le Pen’s far-right French National Front.

Farage’s co-president is Francesco Speroni, an Italian MEP from Lega Nord, who defended some of the views of Breivik in 2011 saying: “If [Breivik’s] ideas are that we are going towards Eurabia and those sorts of things, that western Christian civilisation needs to be defended, yes, I’m in agreement.”

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German princess appears in court accused of threatening to kill Muslims and attacking fellow revellers at a posh Scots party

A German princess appeared in court yesterday accused of threatening to kill Muslims and calling police officers paedophiles at a posh Scots bash. Princess Theodora Sayn-Wittgenstein is also charged with shouting homophobic abuse and attacking fellow revellers and security staff at the exclusive event in St Andrews on Saturday.

The 27-year-old, whose mum is Swedish and whose dad is a German prince, was at the Oktoberfest party at Kinkell Farm with a host of drunken toffs from around the world. It is one of the highlights of the social calendar with students at the university where the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge met and fell in love.

Sayn-Wittgenstein, from Bavaria, was arrested at the party and locked in a cell over the weekend before appearing from custody at Cupar Sheriff Court. Officers hustled her in through a back door with a coat over her head. It is understood they had to wait until a cell became free because court staff didn’t want her to share with other prisoners due to her background.

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Islamophobic hoax exposed

Birmingham Islamic plot

Tahir Alam – who has been the target of an Islamophobic campaign, originating in the Sunday Times and subsequently taken up by a number of other media outlets including BBC News, which claimed that there was a “Islamic plot” to take over Birmingham schools and even that this was a case of “terrorism in the UK” – has issued a press release refuting the allegations.

Responding to the “leaked” letter outlining the supposed plot, Tahir Alam condemns “the baseless and false assertions that have been made in this anonymous, unsigned and undated document, the authenticity of which any decent and fair-minded person would question and quite quickly conclude as a hoax”.

Indeed, as even the most cursory read through the document will confirm, it is quite obviously faked. The fact that it has been taken seriously in the news media is a worrying reflection of the extent to which anti-Muslim prejudice in the UK today has destroyed journalists’ capacity for critical thinking when it comes to evaluating spurious Islamophobic propaganda.

Update:  See also “Times discovers that ‘Trojan horse’ letter is a crude forgery”, Islamophobia Watch, 11 March 2014

Far-right Islamophobes compete for votes in Munich

Michael Stürzenberger
Die Freiheit leader Michael Stürzenberger addresses anti-mosque rally

The Süddeutsche Zeitung reports on how two far-right political parties, Die Freiheit (Freedom) and Bürgerinitiative Ausländerstopp (Citizens’ Initiative to Stop Immigrants – BIA), led respectively by Michael Stürzenberger and Karl Richter, are competing for the anti-Muslim vote in the forthcoming local elections in Munich.

While both parties incite hatred of Muslims, the BIA is a more traditionally fascist organisation, being an offshoot of the neo-Nazi NPD, of which Richeter is vice-chairman, and as its name indicates it promotes a hardline anti-immigration line. Die Freiheit represents the newer manifestation of the far right, concentrating on denouncing Muslims specifically rather than migrants generally, while also adopting a pro-Israel stance that is rejected by neo-Nazis.

Stürzenberger is a regular contributor to the “counterjihadist” website Politically Incorrect. He has come to prominence through waging a fierce campaign against plans to build an Islamic centre in Munich.

Süddeutsche Zeitung anticipates that both parties will win seats on Munich city council.

Update:  The results have been declared and Die Freiheit failed to gain any representation on Munich city council, though the BIA won a seat.

Montreal rally unites faiths against ‘secularism’ charter

Canadians for Coexistence

With his fuchsia skullcap and sash, Catholic Bishop Thomas Dowd stood out in the crowd at Shaare Zedek Congregation on Sunday. Speaking to nearly 500 people at the synagogue in Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Dowd said he purposely wore his most ostentatious outfit to the multi-faith rally against the Parti Québécois government’s proposed secular charter.

Bill 60, which would bar all public sector workers from wearing “ostentatious” religious symbols like the Muslim head scarf, Jewish skullcap or Sikh turban, died on the order paper last week when Premier Pauline Marois dissolved the National Assembly to call an election. But speakers, who included local politicians and representatives of six faiths, said that was no reason to stop protesting, since the PQ has vowed to adopt the charter if it wins a majority on April 7.

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Reports and comment from Islamophobia Watch 3‑9 March

Reports and comment from Islamophobia Watch 3‑9 March 2014

Slough TUC condemns far-right bullying tactics over Legoland event

Casuals United Legoland protestA trade union group has expressed disappointment after Legoland cancelled a controversial private event following threats of violence and protests.

An Eid family fun day organised by the Muslim Research and Development Foundation on Sunday was pulled by the Windsor theme park last week because it could “no longer guarantee the safety of guests and employees”. That followed staff being bombarded with threats from far-right groups including the English Defence League (EDL) because of the foundation’s association with controversial preacher Haitham al-Haddad.

The Slough Trades Council secretary, Anas Ghaffar, said: “It is a tragedy that an event such as this has been stopped as a result of the bullying tactics of groups such as the EDL.”

Slough Observer, 9 March 2014

Why Muslims in Birmingham feel like a ‘suspect’ community

“The post-9/11 ‘war on terror’ narrative, has revealed a new suspect community. Whether inadvertently or not, measures such as profiling, hard-line policing, stop and search and surveillance all have the potential to stigmatise an entire population, such as Irish people living in Britain during the conflict in Northern Ireland, and now the Muslim community in Britain.”

Imran Awan, deputy director of the Centre for Applied Criminology at Birmingham City University, and co-editor of the study Extremism, Counter-terrorism and Policing, examines the impact of counter-terrorism legislation and other repressive measures on the Muslim community in Birmingham.

Huffington Post, 9 March 2014