‘Unsubstantiated’ – it should be Andrew Gilligan’s middle name

ENGAGE reports that the Charity Commission has published the results of its investigation into Muslim Aid, and that it “found no evidence of irregular or improper use of the Charity’s funds or any evidence that the Charity had illegally funded any proscribed or designated entities”.

The investigation was prompted by Andrew Gilligan’s Dispatches programme broadcast in March this year. Needless to say, Gilligan is deeply unhappy that the Commission rejected his accusations against Muslim Aid as “unsubstantiated”. But you’d have thought Gilligan would be used to this sort of thing by now. Back in 2004 he was forced to resign from the BBC after the Hutton Inquiry found his accusations against Alastair Campell to be “unfounded”. And then there was Gilligan’s Evening Standard witch-hunt of Lee Jasper in the run-up to the May 2008 London Mayoral election. In July that year Boris Johnson’s Tory-dominated Forensic Audit Panel published its report which found that Jasper’s actions “did not breach any rules or protocols”. Are you beginning to see a pattern emerging here?

The only thing Gilligan seems to have learned from his sacking by the BBC was to frame his accusations in weasel words that would block a successful libel action by his victims. Hopefully that won’t be sufficient to prevent Muslim Aid suing him.

Update:  See also “Charity Commission rejects criticism over Muslim Aid investigation”, Third Sector, 20 December 2010

ENGAGE writes to the JC

ENGAGE has written to the Jewish Chronicle to complain about Martin Bright’s report on ENGAGE’s relations with the All Party Parliamentary Group on Islamophobia. They state:

“It is the machinations of journalists like Martin Bright who have through their disreputable work sought to advance the ‘good (apolitical) Muslim’/’bad (politically active) Muslim’ dichotomy that has created a situation in which Muslims who challenge and demur from the sham discourse on ‘Islamism’ are derisively treated and cast beyond the pale. It will be a long time before we take lessons on democratic engagement and widening the parameters of political participation from individuals like Martin Bright and we will continue to work to empower British Muslims to actively participate in our politics and media.”

The JC‘s enthusiasm for discrediting politically active Muslims is of course not unconnected with the fact that politically active Muslims are almost all supporters of the Palestinian cause. The importance the JC attaches to this issue is demonstrated by the fact that they not only offered Martin Bright a job, but even went so far as to invent the new position of political editor specifically for him. The one qualification for this post that Bright possessed – he had not previously shown any other expertise in reporting issues affecting the Jewish community – was his obsessive hostility towards political Islam.

Incidentally, Bright wrote to us last week to complain about our coverage of his JC report on ENGAGE and the APPG on Islamophobia. “You again describe me as an Islamophobe”, he wrote. “This is highly defamatory and inaccurate. You produce no evidence to back up your claim. I would appreciate if you removed this from your site immediately.”

As it happens, in that particular post we didn’t actually accuse Bright of being an Islamophobe. He just didn’t take the time to read the article properly. But Bright does have a sore spot when it comes to accusations of Islamophobia. Last year he threatened ENGAGE with legal action after they published a piece accusing him of being an Islamophobe. In response, I wrote:

“I can remember Bright telling a FOSIS conference at City Hall back in August 2005 that he had no problem being described as an Islamophobe – because, he said, there is a lot in Islam to be afraid of. He got himself booed, as you might expect. Around a hundred people were at the conference, so there is no lack of witnesses who can attest to this.”

I’ve consulted others who were present at that conference and I didn’t get it exactly right. Bright in fact told the FOSIS conference that he couldn’t see anything wrong with Islamophobia – because there is a lot in Islam to be afraid of. As I noted, he was roundly booed and a number of people criticised his remarks. In reply to the discussion, Bright did apologise and said he was in fact a great admirer of Islam.

If Bright thinks that made everything all right, he should perhaps consider what the response would have been if he had told a UJS conference that he saw nothing wrong with antisemitism because it was legitimate to have a fear of Judaism. Would have have been forgiven if he had followed this with an apology and claimed that some of his best friends were Jewish?

One thing is for certain – there’s no way he would have been offered his present cushy job at the Jewish Chronicle.

Foreign policy, not Luton, is the problem

“Al-Abdaly grew up in Sweden. The Daily Express reports that there was ‘a shift in his personality after he left Sweden in 2001 at the age of 19 to study sports therapy in Luton’. It doesn’t seem to occur to them that the date – 2001 when the US invaded Afghanistan – might be more important than moving to Luton.”

Ken Olende in Socialist Worker, 14 December 2010

The New Anti-Capitalist Party and Islamophobia

Ilham_Moussaid“The majority of the left in France believe that the hijab is an assault on women’s rights. This position quickly moves into the prejudice that Muslim women in France are more oppressed than non-Muslim women, that the experience of women in, say, Saudi Arabia is merely an extreme case of an oppression which is inherent in Islam.

“Muslim and Arab men are then presented as the major source of women’s oppression and contrasted with the progressive white values of Republican France. So opposition to religious practices on the basis of progressive values can easily turn into a thinly disguised form of racism – and often does.”

In an interview with Socialist Alternative, John Mullen of France’s Nouveau Parti Anticapitaliste explains the resignation from the NPA of 12 activists, including former NPA candidate Ilham Moussaïd.

US Justice Department sues Chicago school for discrimination against Muslim teacher

The U.S. government is suing a suburban Chicago school district for refusing to grant a Muslim teacher unpaid leave to go on a Hajj pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.

Attending the annual pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca once in a lifetime is one of the five central tenets of the Islamic faith. Safoorah Khan, a middle school teacher in the Berkeley school district, about 15 miles west of Chicago, applied for an unpaid leave of absence in 2008 to go on the Hajj, but her request was denied.

She ultimately quit her job to attend and later filed a complaint with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The U.S. Justice Department filed a complaint Monday in a Chicago federal court alleging that the school district violated the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by refusing Khan’s time-off request and failing to accommodate her religious practice.

Khan began teaching math at the district’s McArthur Middle School in 2007. According to court documents, she wrote to the school superintendent in August 2008, asking for an unpaid leave from Dec. 1-19 that year to travel to Mecca on the pilgrimage.

The district denied her request, noting that the “purpose of her leave was not related to her professional duties,” the Justice Department said. The legal challenge filed Monday states that “because Berkeley School District denied her a religious accommodation, the district compelled Ms. Khan to choose between her job and her religious beliefs, and thus forced her discharge.”

The lawsuit aims to prevent school districts from discriminating against teachers on the basis of religion. Khan also wants her job back, along with back pay and other damages for pain and suffering, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.

AOL News, 14 December 2010

Woman arrested for wearing hijab sues Georgia city

Lisa_ValentineDOUGLASVILLE, Ga. — A Muslim woman who was arrested after she refused to remove her headscarf in a west Georgia courthouse filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against the city of Douglasville and the officers who arrested her, contending they violated her constitutional rights.

Lisa Valentine said authorities trampled on her First Amendment rights in December 2008 when she was ordered to serve 10 days in jail for contempt of court after she refused to remove her hijab at a courtroom. She was released in less than a day, but her arrest infuriated Muslim rights activists and prompted changes in Georgia’s courtroom policy.

“I hope that no person of faith will ever have to experience the type of egregious treatment I suffered at any Georgia courthouse because of the expression of my beliefs,” said Valentine, whose lawsuit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and its Georgia chapter.

Continue reading

CNN’s Fareed Zakaria blasts Glenn Beck’s claim that 10 per cent of Muslims are terrorists

Glenn Beck and Fareed Zakaria are best known as political pundits, but this week the two are locked head-to-head in a battle over math.

Beck launched the feud by claiming on his radio show last week that 10% of Muslims are terrorists. “What is the number of Islamic terrorists? 1 percent? I think it’s closer to 10%, but the rest of the P.C. world will tell you, ‘Oh no, it’s minuscule,'” the Fox host said.

Beck first made the claim in his 2003 book The Real America, in which he said “Ninety percent of Islam is peaceful. Ten percent of Islam wants us dead.”

Fareed Zakaria, an Indian-born journalist and the former editor ofNewsweek International, fired back at Beck’s claims on his CNN show “GPS” on Sunday night.

“Let’s do a bit of math here,” said Zakaria, demonstrating his calculations on a chalkboard. “There are 1,570,000,000 Muslims worldwide. Take ten percent of those Muslims and you get 157,000,000. That’s how many Muslim terrorists Glenn Beck is suggesting there are in the world.”

He went on to attack Beck’s math, and his methods. “Beck wondered why ‘Oh why this wasn’t receiving any media coverage?'” Zakaria continued. “Well let me suggest one reason. It is total nonsense. A figure made up by Glenn Beck with absolutely no basis in fact.”

New York Daily News, 13 December 2010