Arson attack on West Bank mosque

Beit Fajar mosque arson2BEIT FAJAR, WEST BANK — Arsonists set fire to a mosque in this Palestinian town early Monday, charring Korans, burning holes into the carpet and scrawling “revenge” in Hebrew near the doorway.

The attack, which residents blamed on Jewish settlers, threatened to stir passions amid a crisis in Israeli-Palestinian peace talks over settlement construction.

Witnesses at Beit Fajar, a major stone-cutting center south of Bethlehem, said that a car carrying several people pulled up at the mosque about 3 a.m. and that a fire was blazing after they left. “We smelled smoke, and young men outside were shouting that the mosque is on fire,” said Maryam Ismail, who lives across the street. She said neighbors rushed over with hoses and buckets to douse the flames.

Throughout the day, men gathered at the mosque to survey the damage. There were large, scorched gaps in the carpet, linked by a snaking trail of flammable fluid. The walls and ceiling were covered with soot, and a box of singed Korans was removed by Palestinian police officers. “A mosque must be burned,” was scrawled in Hebrew near the door, along with a Star of David.

Washington Post, 5 October 2010

Police fear EDL plan to attack Leicester mosque

EDL No More MosquesPolice fear protesters plan to attack a city mosque before marching into the heart of Leicester’s Muslim community.

Concerns were voiced by Chief Constable Simon Cole in a report to Leicester City Council about the planned march by the English Defence League on October 9. The Chief Constable said that an intelligence and threat assessment indicated a “major threat” to public order.

His report said: “Intelligence dated September 8, 2010, indicated that the EDL intend to come to Leicester and attack a mosque before marching into the Highfields area, which represents the highest resident population of the Muslim community.

“This reflects previous intentions of EDL processions, such as that within Leicester, where actions were targeted to cause disruption to the Muslim community by provoking serious public disorder.”

Leicester City Cabinet yesterday agreed to apply to the Home Office to ban the planned procession under the Public Order Act 1986.

However, the EDL, in a statement, rejected the police claims. EDL event organiser Guramit Singh said: “We are coming to Leicester to peacefully demonstrate and we denounce attacks on any mosques. We are here to fight militant Islam, not moderate Islam. The intelligence provided by the police is incorrect.”

The EDL submitted an application to march through the city to police this week. If the Home Office agrees to ban the EDL march, the group could still hold a static protest, which the authorities would be powerless to prevent taking place.

Leicester Mercury, 25 September 2010

See also “Vote to ban EDL march in Leicester ‘unanimous'”, BBC News, 25 September 2010

EDL mosque placards

Police release CCTV images of EDL hooligans in Dudley

EDL Dudley July 2010 2

Detectives investigating disorder which broke out during an English Defence League protest in Dudley have released CCTV images of men they want to identify.

West Midlands Police said officers were continuing to investigate criminal damage and other offences committed during disturbances in the town centre on July 17.

The CCTV stills, taken on the day of the EDL protest and a counter-demonstration, show 22 individuals whom detectives wish to trace.

Homes in the Alexandra Street area of Dudley were attacked during the violence, which also saw damage caused to parked cars, restaurants and a Hindu temple.

Detective Inspector Carl Southwick, who is leading the investigation, said: “We are appealing to members of the public to look closely at these images.

“We are committed to identifying those responsible for the pockets of disorder and criminal damage that took place in Dudley town centre.”

Press Association, 23 September 2010

36 Muslim graves desecrated in Strasbourg

Strasbourg graves vadalised

AFP reports that 36 Muslim graves in Meinau cemetery in Strasbourg were vandalised on Thursday night. Some tombstones were overturned, others smashed. Children’s graves were among those damaged. Three swastikas were drawn on the gravel paths. Abdelaziz Choukri of the Strasbourg Grand Mosque pointed out that the attack had taken place on the eve of a event organised by the far-right Front National in the city.

This is the latest in a series of such attacks. In July, 27 graves were desecrated in the Jewish cemetery of Wolfisheim near Strasbourg. In June, 17 Muslim gravestones were knocked over or damaged in the Robertsau cemetery, north of the city. In January, about thirty graves in the Jewish cemetery of Cronenbourg (to the west of Strasbourg) had been damaged on the day of the commemoration of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps.

Update:  See “Cemeteries desecrated in Strasbourg: three skinheads receive prison sentences”, Islamophobia Watch, 20 June 2012

Strasbourg graves vadalised (2)

 

 

Man in St Louis standoff wanted war with Muslims

A man who held federal agents at bay with fake explosives wanted to start a war between Christians and Muslims and kill President Barack Obama, according to charges filed against him Wednesday.

He also may have been driven by an order of protection issued in St. Clair County Circuit Court on Tuesday to bar him from contact with his grandchildren, officials said.

The eight-hour standoff Tuesday night began when FBI and Secret Service agents, accompanied by police, went to the home of Roman Otto Conaway, at 9030 Summit Drive, to question him about a report that he had been making threats. He eventually surrendered on the promise of getting a mental health evaluation.

Conaway was charged Wednesday in federal court in East St. Louis with making false threats to detonate an explosive device and threatening the president. If convicted, he might face five years in prison.

According to an FBI affidavit accompanying the charges, and federal officials, Conaway called someone associated with a St. Louis-area mosque about 1 p.m. Tuesday and said he would burn a Quran that night and provide a video of it to TV stations.

Conaway allegedly said that he thought that Obama had threatened the Rev. Terry Jones, of the Dove World Outreach Center in Florida, into canceling his planned Quran burning on Sept. 11.

Conaway said that he wanted to start a war between Christians and Muslims, kill Obama and other government officials, end the war in Afghanistan “which (expletive) Bush started” and “start an Apocalypse,” court documents say.

The person who received Conaway’s call called the FBI with a phone number obtained from caller ID.

Three federal agents arrived around 6 p.m. Conaway’s door was open, but it slammed shut when he spotted them. A short time later, he emerged with his wife and son, wearing a wide mesh belt with two blocks of an “inert putty-like material designed and formed to replicate blocks of C-4 explosive” to a what was intended to look like a triggering device – a curling iron – FBI Special Agent Richard T. Box wrote in the affidavit.

Conaway told agents that the detonator was also wired to two 55-gallon drums full of combustible chemicals in the front yard and another in the rear. He also told agents that he had experience in ordinance disposal from the U.S. Army.

He eventually allowed his son and wife to leave the house, and surrendered at about 2:10 a.m., Box wrote. There were no real explosives. The standoff triggered an evacuation of the neighborhood that lasted into the early morning.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 23 September 2010

Obviously we are dealing here a man who is severely psychologically disturbed. But it is hardly accidental that Conaway’s threats of violence drew on the anti-Muslim narrative promoted by the US right. And you can imagine how different the media response would have been if Conaway had been a Muslim calling for a war against Christians. He wouldn’t have been dimissed as a single mentally ill individual but portrayed as a representative of his faith.

See also LoonWatch, 22 September 2010

Second attack on Muslim graves at Yorkshire cemetery

A suspected racist attack on Muslim graves at a Yorkshire cemetery has angered and traumatised relatives.

Vandals attacked at least 20 graves, uprooting or demolishing headstones and timber grave marker boards, at the multi-faith Harehills Cemetery in Leeds. Fencing around graves was ripped up and motorcycle tyre marks were left behind along with beer cans and bottles.

The attack, sometime between Friday and Saturday, is the second attack on Muslim graves in the cemetery this year.

Police were called on Saturday afternoon by tearful relatives who discovered the damage. One woman, Sophie Rashid, had only seen her mother buried two days earlier.

Council park wardens were called in to carry out security patrols over the weekend but families are now calling for CCTV cameras to be installed.

Ms Rashid, who discovered a wooden marker post had been torn up at her mother’s grave, said: “The damage is worse to some other graves. Someone appeared to have ridden a motorbike across graves and there were alcohol bottles and cans strewn about. It is really awful and very upsetting.”

Her uncle, Mohammed Ali said: “It is only Muslim graves which have been damaged, so we can only assume there is a racist element to it.”

Ikhlaq Mir, who arranges Muslim funerals at the cemetery, said that the site affected was a new Muslim section containing about 100 graves.

Yorkshire Post, 20 September 2010

EDL supporter charged over racist threats to Muslims

A man was held in custody yesterday afternoon on a charge of racially aggravated public order. The court appearance followed an incident at the new Wrexham Muslim Association mosque.

Father-of-four David Jared Evans, 36, was arrested over alleged racist comments and threats made to two people who were leaving the mosque at the former Miners’ Institute in Grosvenor Road, Wrexham, on Monday evening.

Evans, of High Street, Rhos, is charged with using threatening, abusive and insulting language and behaviour towards Abdulla Anwar which were racially aggravated.

Robert Blakemore, prosecuting, outlined the allegations at Flintshire Magistrates’ Court and said the case should be dealt with in the crown court. Magistrates agreed and Evans said in any event he wished to elect crown court trial.

The court heard that social networking sites were advertising a demonstration on Saturday against the use of the former Miners’ Institute as a mosque.

Mr Blakemore said after reading texts on Evans’ mobile phone between himself and the English Defence League he would apply for a remand in custody.

The Mold-based magistrates remanded Evans in custody for a week pending committal proceedings to the crown court.

The Leader, 17 September 2010

Police investigate 9/11 fire at airport prayer room

Police say they are “keeping an open mind” about a suspected arson attack at an Islamic prayer room at Manchester Airport.

The cabin is used by taxi drivers and airport staff for worship. The blaze broke out on Saturday – the ninth anniversary of the September 11 attacks on New York’s Twin Towers. Detectives say they are investigating whether there was a religious or racial motive to the blaze.

Two ceremonial garments inside the room were deliberately set ablaze between 10pm and midnight, although the building itself was not damaged. Officers have studied the charred textiles for clues and are reviewing CCTV footage from the scene.

Supt David Hull, police commander at Manchester Airport, said the blaze could have injured or killed people working nearby if it had spread

He said: “Had the fire taken hold, the damage caused would have been significantly worse. We are keeping an open mind about the motive and have been working closely with those who use the facility to address any concerns they have and to reassure them that we are treating this very seriously and are doing all we can to identify the person responsible.”

Manchester Evening News, 15 September 2011