Islam is not the threat to our planet
By Ken Livingstone
Morning Star, 24 September 2005
The terrorist attacks on London in July brought out the best in millions of people. As we came to terms with the horror of the attacks, Londoners made clear they were not going to be divided by terrorists, nor by anyone trying to exploit those tragic events.
This was shown a week later when millions came out onto the streets to stand side by side with people of every race and religion in memory of those who had lost their lives.
Some tabloid newspapers ran articles praising Britain’s Muslim leaders who urged their communities to help the police to find anyone connected with the planning or execution of the attacks.
The dozens of opinion polls since the attacks showed the same pattern. People want everything possible done to prevent further attacks.
At the same time, two thirds of people support multiculturalism and believe it makes Britain a better place to live and three out of four people think Britain’s role in Iraq made it more vulnerable.
Nonetheless, since 7 July, and far more openly since the attempted bombings two weeks later, there has also been a steadily mounting campaign by the right wing media and others to exploit the attacks to try to smash the progressive response to the bombings.
The ideological axis of this is the idea that the world is increasingly dominated by a “clash of civilisations” in which Islam is pitted against the West.
In an ironic mirror image of Al Qaeda’s denunciations of the West, Islam is portrayed as uniquely evil, or, in the left variants, uniquely reactionary.
In this latter camp can be found a whole raft of supposedly “left-wing” internet blogs.
A court in Madrid has jailed former al-Jazeera journalist Tayssir Alouni for collaborating with a terrorist organisation. The Qatar-based pan-Arab news network said it would appeal against the conviction, which it called “unfair”. Alouni – who protests his innocence – interviewed Osama Bin Laden before the 11 September attacks. He was sentenced to seven years for acting as financial courier to Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network.