The three men arrested last November after attacks on City University Muslim students will not face court proceedings. According to a police spokesperson, charges have been dropped “due to insufficient evidence and a lack of witnesses coming forward.”
The three men, aged 17, 18 and 19, were arrested and released on bail until 4 January. The conditions of bail, stating the men were not to go within 100 metres of the university or to contact any City students or prosecution witnesses, are no longer enforceable as they have expired.
At the time the police said that they were treating the attacks against members of the university’s Islamic Society as racially aggravated.
It remains unclear whether the police continue to carry out extra patrols around campus. The incident on 5 November started near the university’s Gloucester Building which houses the Muslim prayer room. Fighting then continued on St John Street where the students were attacked with sticks and poles by a group of 30 white and black males.
Although the security services at the university were unaware of this development, Richard Mansfield, Security Services Manager, said that “there is no intelligence to suggest” that whoever was responsible for the attack would try to seek revenge. He added that he did not believe there was added threat to students.
For details of the November attacks, see Islamophobia and Anti-Muslim Hate Crime: a London Case Study by Jonathan Githens-Mazer and Bob Lambert.
A rise in the number of hate crimes against Muslims in London is being encouraged by mainstream politicians and sections of the media, a study written by a former Scotland Yard counter-terrorism officer, published yesterday, says. Attacks ranging from death threats and murder to persistent low-level assaults, such as spitting and name-calling, are in part whipped up by extremists and sections of mainstream society, the study says.
A teenager who petrol bombed a mosque has escaped a jail sentence after it was judged not to be a race hate crime.
Four men who were part of a mob that went on the rampage during a
CCTV cameras and security lights have been installed at a cemetery in a bid to stop attacks on Muslim graves.
Costa Mesa police have stepped up patrols near the Islamic Educational Center of Orange County, the target of recent anti-Islamic acts including vandalism, hate mail and the burning of two copies of the Koran.
As of New Year’s Eve evening, police had no suspects for an attack against a mosque in Malmö earlier in the day when shots had been fired through the window of the building.