Centre for Social Cohesion defends Muslims (yes, really)

douglas_murrayGovernments across Europe must do more to protect people of Muslim backgrounds who face threats and attacks from militants for exercising their right to free speech, a report said.

The report from the UK-based Centre for Social Cohesion thinktank warned that official failure to offer victims the protection they needed had left “significant numbers” of Europe’s ethnic minority citizens unable peacefully to express themselves and created the impression that more Muslims were opposed to open debate and free speech than was actually the case.

Among the cases highlighted were those of Satanic Verses author Salman Rushdie, who lived in hiding from death threats for a decade and Maryam Namazie, who received threats to her life after setting up the Council of Ex-Muslims in Britain and denouncing the veil.

Douglas Murray, director of the Centre for Social Cohesion and author of the report, said: “The inalienable right to freedom of speech and expression has come under threat by Muslim extremists. Fellow Muslims are finding it increasingly difficult to criticise elements of their faith or culture without fear of significant reprisal.”

Press Association, 10 November 2008


How touching that Douglas Murray and the Centre for Social Cohesion have discovered a sudden concern for the wellbeing of European Muslims. This is, of course, the same Douglas Murray whose February 2006 speech to the Pim Fortuyn Memorial Conference was so extreme (“All immigration into Europe from Muslim countries must stop … Conditions for Muslims in Europe must be made harder across the board”) that the Social Affairs Unit have removed it from their website.

Al-Qaeda has support ‘in large parts of the country’ says Tory MP

Secret enclaves of al-Qaeda extremists based in London, Birmingham and Luton are planning mass-casualty attacks in Britain, according to a leaked Government intelligence report. The document, which was drawn up by the intelligence branch of the Ministry of Defence, MI5 and Special Branch, states that “some thousands” of extremists are active in the UK.

Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP for Newark, said al-Qaeda now had support in large parts of the country, especially around Luton which was the spot where the 7/7 terrorists assembled before travelling to London to mount the Tube bombings. He added: “We know that subversion and support for al-Qaeda is taking place in campuses and prisons all over the UK.”

Sunday Telegraph, 9 November 2008

‘Political correctness’ allows Muslims to control prison

Whitemoor prisonMuslim gangs have created no-go areas for warders in a British jail. Guards claim the Islamic mobs are “a law unto themselves”. And prison staff have passed a vote of no confidence in their governor. MP Malcolm Moss, 65, said Whitemoor Prison, Cambs, was descending into turmoil. He added that staff blamed governor Steve Rodford for pandering to political correctness and making the Muslims untouchable.

The Conservative MP for North East Cambridgeshire warned the unrest had created a “tense” atmosphere not seen since the 90s when the IRA maintained an inner sanctum inside the maximum security prison. He said: “There are no-go sections policed by Muslim inmates, not staff. In the 1990s officers couldn’t do their jobs properly and prisoners did what they like. We may be operating a similar situation.”

A Ministry of Justice spokes-man said: “Ministers receive up-dates on high security prisons and there is no indication of concerns about the management of HMP Whitemoor.”

Daily Star, 6 November 2008

Baptist church in Florida again offends Muslims with message

God loves you Allah hatesA Baptist church in Florida is once again creating tension with its Muslim neighbors over a marquee message. A sign posted outside First Conservative Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., reads, “God loves you, Allah hates.”

A local television station interviewed a Muslim woman who said she took offense. “What have I done?” asked the woman, who is not identified. “What have I done to deserve that kind of hatred in my neighborhood?”

She said she was driving by the church with her children when the sign caught her attention. “The thing that bothers me so much is that this is in my neighborhood, where I live with my children,” she said. “To know that people that feel this way are in my neighborhood is scary.”

It isn’t the first time the independent Baptist church has grabbed attention with its marquee, which is updated regularly to confront passersby with messages about doctrinal, social or world-religion issues.

“We find it an integral part of communicating the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ,” Pastor Gene Youngblood says on a website, Truthsthatfree.com.

In 2005 the church made news by posting a sign that read “Islam is evil and believes in murder, Surah 9-29” contrasted with, “Jesus teaches peace, Matt. 5-9.”

In 2003 local Muslims were upset when the church sign read “Jesus forbade murder Matthew 26-52 Muhammad approved murder Surah 8-65.”

Youngblood says on his website that he loves Muslims and would like to see many of them accept Christ, but the sign’s purpose is to warn people of “false teachers” and “untruth from theologically unsound doctrine.”

APB, 3 November 2008

Social Affairs Unit removes Douglas Murray’s Feb 2006 anti-Muslim rant from website

Engage reveals that a speech delivered by notorious Islamophobe Douglas Murray at the Pim Fortuyn Memorial Conference in The Hague in February 2006, entitled “What are we to do about Islam?“, has been removed from the website of Murray’s former employers, the Social Affairs Unit, who presumably now find it embarrassing to be associated with such an extremist rant.

The Times, Ramadan and the London Olympics

Dave Crouch of Media Workers Against the War replies to an article in the Times which seems to suggest that Muslims might be inclined to engage in terrorist actions during the 2012 Olympics because they will be hungry due to fasting over Ramadan. He concludes: “It is because of reporting of this kind that MWAW is holding its conference this year on Islamophobia.”


Police are warned of Ramadan tensions during Games

Richard Kerbaj and Ruth Gledhill

Times, 27 October 2008

Specialist advice is being given to Scotland Yard on how to reduce tensions between police and Muslims during the London Olympics because of growing concerns about the Games clashing with the holy month of Ramadan, when Muslims fast during the day, The Times has learnt.

Experts will also warn the Metropolitan Police to ensure that the planned commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the massacre of Israeli athletes by Palestinian terrorists at the Munich Games does not offend local and travelling Muslims.

The recommendations have been made by inter-faith advisers to Scotland Yard, where antiterrorism police are preparing to combat any possible Islamic terrorist threat to the Games.

Community tensions in the lead-up to the games have already been raised by a controversial Muslim movement, Tablighi Jamaat, which plans to build Britain’s largest mosque and Islamic complex near the 2012 Olympic stadium site.

Michael Mumisa, an Islamic scholar, and one of four experts hired by Scotland Yard who began training the police this week on inter-faith issues, said that the commemoration of the 11 Israeli athletes, killed by Palestinian militants from the Black September Organisation at the 1972 Munich Games, could become a national security threat if it was not managed properly and was perceived by Muslims to be “hijacking” the Games.

Edward Kessler, executive director of the Woolfe Institute, which deals with inter-faith dialogue, teaching and research, said that police needed to have a “minimum level of faith literacy” to help them deal with religious issues during the London Games. Dr Kessler said: “During Ramadan you’re going to have a lot of tired, hungry, less evenly tempered people because they haven’t eaten for 18 hours.”

Alan Craig’s call to CPO Abbey Mills mosque site rejected

Alan Craig in churchLondon’s proposed ‘mega-mosque’ has been allowed to complete its application for planning permission, despite calls from one councillor to remove the “illegal and irresponsible” mosque.

At Newham Council meeting last Monday night, Cllr Alan Craig asked the Mayor, Sir Robin Wales, to enforce a compulsory purchase order (CPO) to reclaim the site from the Abbey Mills Mosque Trust, members of Islamic sect Tablighi Jamaat.

Cllr Craig said: “Tablighi Jamaat intend that the mega-mosque will be their new international headquarters, yet the current temporary mosque on the Abbey Mills site has now been operating illegally and irresponsibly without planning permission for two years.”

A spokesperson for the Abbey Mills Mosque Trust said: “I don’t know how it is illegal. We’ve owned the site since 1996, and we’ve been regularly meeting with the authorities, and they’re happy so long as we continue to make progress on the project.”

Sir Robin said: “The Trust have advised that they are currently preparing another application so that they can continue using the site for a further temporary period. Development of the area will have to be resident-friendly and the facilities must serve everyone in the local community. There is currently no evidence that the Trust will not do [this] and therefore we are unable to CPO the site until they submit their masterplan for the site.”

Religious Intelligence, 2 November 2008

Terrorism is based on Qur’an, convert to Catholicism tells pope

Magdi_AllamThe Muslim-born journalist baptized by Pope Benedict XVI at Easter asked the pope to tell his top aide for relations with Muslims that Islam is not an intrinsically good religion and that Islamic terrorism is not the result of a minority gone astray.

As the Vatican was preparing to host the first meeting of the Catholic-Muslim Forum Nov. 4-6, Magdi Allam, a longtime critic of the Muslim faith of his parents, issued an open letter to Pope Benedict that included criticism of Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.

He told the pope that it “is vital for the common good of the Catholic Church, the general interest of Christianity and of Western civilization itself” that the pope make a pronouncement in “a clear and binding way” on the question of whether Islam is a valid religion.

Allam told Pope Benedict he specifically objected to Cardinal Tauran telling a conference in August that Islam itself promotes peace but that “‘some believers’ have ‘betrayed their faith’,” using it as a pretext for violence.

“The objective reality, I tell you with all sincerity and animated by a constructive intent, is exactly the opposite of what Cardinal Tauran imagines,” Allam told the pope. “Islamic extremism and terrorism are the mature fruit” of following “the sayings of the Quran and the thought and action of Mohammed.”

Catholic News Service, 29 October 2008


Damian Thompson, editor of the Catholic Herald, broadly agrees. He demands: “will anyone dare discuss the hate-filled rhetoric ofmainstream Islam when the Vatican hosts its first Catholic-Muslim Forum next week? Or will both sides maintain the doctrine – promulgated by every public institution in Britain – that the jihadist and anti-semitic sentiments encouraged by Arab governments and Muslim community leaders are a distortion of Islam?”

Daily Telegraph, 30 October 2008