College student facing mosque attack charges has bail relaxed

A Kingston College student accused of being part of a gang who allegedly attacked Kingston mosque has had his bail relaxed to allow him to continue his studies.

James Stacey, 18, of Ashhurst Drive, Shepperton, is one of nine defendants facing trial at Kingston Crown Court in September for the attack on November 21 last year. He was among six men at Wimbledon Magistrates’ Court on Thursday, August 25, who have denied charges of affray and religiously aggravated criminal damage.

Three men have already been committed to the Crown Court. All nine men were banned from entering the borough of Kingston at an earlier hearing as part of their bail conditions.

Jordan Ellingham, 21, of Camden Avenue, Feltham, Martin Pottle, 22, of Eldridge Close, Feltham, Karl Mathews, 20, of High Street, Brentford, Terence Earl, 31, of Aspen Lane, Northolt and Adam Khalfan, Feltham Road, Ashford, will have a hearing on September 22 before a trial.

They will be joined by Paul Abley, 24, of Hounslow Road, Shepperton, Alfie Wallace, 18, of Hetherington Road, Shepperton and David Morris, 20, of Elm Way, Epsom.

Kingston Guardian, 27 August 2011

Four charged over EDL attack on Plymouth kebab shop

Four people are to appear at court next month on charges relating to an alleged attack on a Kurdish family in their takeaway shop.

The four were arrested on the afternoon of July 31 after police were called to the Istanbul Kebab shop in Exeter Street.

The four, who were said to have previously been at the nearby Wild Coyote pub – which has since been renamed the East End Bar – returned to answer their bail yesterday when they were charged.

Hayley Well, aged 27, from Shell Close, Leigham has been charged with racially aggravated common assault by beating.

Kelly Watterson, aged 28, from St Peters Road in Manadon, is charged with racially aggravated affray and racially aggravated common assault by beating.

Michael Rafferty, aged 33, from Queen Street, Devonport has been charged with obstructing or resisting a constable in the execution of his duty.

Ricky Burley, aged 43, from High Street, Stonehouse has been charged with using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour or disorderly behaviour and obstructing or resisting a constable in the execution of his duty.

All four have been released on bail to reappear at Plymouth Magistrates Court on September 7.

Until their appearance, they have been given conditions which include not going within 100 metres of the Istanbul Kebab Takeaway in Exeter Street.

Plymouth Herald, 27 August 2011

EDL march through Tower Hamlets banned by Theresa May

The home secretary has agreed to a police request to ban the far-right English Defence League from staging a march through one of the UK’s biggest Muslim communities in east London.

Theresa May said she would outlaw any marches in Tower Hamlets and four neighbouring boroughs – whether by the EDL or any other groups – for the next 30 days, having “balanced rights to protest against the need to ensure local communities and property are protected”. She added: “I know that the Metropolitan police are committed to using their powers to ensure communities and properties are protected.”

Police sought the ban after the EDL – which has seen widespread public disorder at earlier rallies – planned to march on 3 September through Tower Hamlets, which has a significant Muslim community, many of Bangladeshi origin.

In a statement the force said it made the request following information that prompted fears that the march could cause “serious public disorder, violence and damage”. It added: “Tactically we believe this is the best option to prevent this.”

Chief Superintendent Julia Pendry warned EDL supporters to stay away. “We have made this decision [to seek the ban] based on specific intelligence and information, and our message is clear: we do not want people coming into the areas to attend these events.”

The march had been vehemently opposed by community leaders, among them the two local MPs and the borough’s mayor, as well as a series of Muslim and Jewish groups.

Guardian, 26 August 2011

Lutfur Rahman in talks with police as EDL threaten to defy Tower Hamlets march ban

Lutfur RahmanTower Hamlets’ police chief is in the middle of two days of talks with community leaders over whether the Met should apply to the Home Office to ban the planned English Defence League march in Whitechapel on September 3.

It follows threats by Tower Hamlets mayor Lutfur Rahman that he will take the Met Police to the High Court if they do not make the application.

Chief Insp Paul Rickett is due at the Town Hall today (Thursday) for a meeting of the Community Contingency Planning and Tension monitoring group. It follows a meeting yesterday with the Independent Police Advisory group held at his Bethnal Green office.

“The EDL tell us if they’re banned they’ll implement a series of unannounced, sporadic demonstrations,” he told the Advertiser. “A ban could mean an EDL demo in the East End that would be a massive challenge to the police – I don’t know if I have the resources to cope.”

The EDL applied weeks ago under the law to demonstrate and is currently negotiating the route and how the march will be managed. “We can request the Home Office for a ban only if they refuse our conditions,” Mr Rickett warned. “The EDL say they’ll submit application after application to stage a march if we seek a ban – there could be a sustained challenge.”

But he warned a Home Office ban on an EDL march would be an “own goal” which would also stop United East End coalition’s counter march against the EDL planned for the same day.

The mayor of Tower Hamlets has been negotiating with Scotland Yard this week after he publicly warned the Metropolitan Commissioner on Friday that he will go to court unless an application is made by Monday.

Mr Rahman said: “I will instruct lawyers to go to the High Court and seek injunctive relief if the police fail to act. We will not let the EDL or any other bunch of extremists divide our community.” He challenged Home Secretary Theresa May to use her powers to stop the EDL coming to Whitechapel on grounds of public safety.

But no decision had been made by yesterday (Wednesday) by Scotland Yard’s Public Order Office on a ban – despite a 25,000-name petition to stop the EDL handed in last week. The Town Hall yesterday said: “We are still negotiating with the police and our own lawyers.”

East London Advertiser, 25 August 2011

Tower Hamlets: Met applies to prohibit EDL march

EDL Close East London Mosque NowThe campaign to have a march planned by the English Defence League through one of London’s most ethnically-diverse boroughs banned looks to have been successful. The Metropolitan Police has announced that it is “in the process of applying to the Home Secretary for authority to prohibit a march in five London boroughs for a period of thirty days.” It will be effective from 2 September.

More details of the application are promised later, including the names of the boroughs affected, one of which is undoubtedly Tower Hamlets. The application, which is highly unlikely to be turned down, applies to all marches in the boroughs concerned, including a planned counter-march against the EDL.

Tower Hamlets mayor Lutfur Rahman has applauded the decision of acting Met commissioner Tim Godwin, thanked the “thousands of people” who supported the campaign and asked those who had planned “to march in support of our cause to stand down.” He added, “You have helped us achieve our aim and we no longer need a mass show of support.” Tower Hamlets borough police commander Paul Rickett is understood to be fully in support of the measure, although as an East London Advertiser report indicates, the possibility remains of rallies or static demonstrations taking place.

The EDL’s eagerness to parade in Tower Hamlets arises from a false belief that the borough is seething with Muslim extremists plotting to infiltrate political institutions and destroy English cultural traditions. This is, of course, a ludicrous distortion of reality based on a fantasy version of the East End and its history. Sadly, it is hardly contradicted by selective, exaggerated and simplistic reporting by some journalists. The area has even been described as an “Islamic Republic“, when it is plainly no such thing.

These are sensationalist simplifications of an extremely complex picture. They may generate marketable media product, but by neglecting such crucial factors as the wider story of Bangladeshi Londoners’ long-running community struggles, the role of competing groups within the Tower Hamlets Labour Party and the intricacies of local Muslims’ social and political activism they obscure far more than they claim to reveal. They also do more harm than good to a part of the capital that has many social problems and where maintaining what are generally good community relations can require considerable subtlety and skill.

Dave Hill’s London Blog, 25 August 2011


The prospect of a static assembly by the EDL does indeed remain. However, the police have the power under Section 14 of the Public Order Act to “give directions imposing on the persons organising or taking part in the assembly such conditions as to the place at which the assembly may be (or continue to be) held, its maximum duration, or the maximum number of persons who may constitute it”.

West Yorkshire Police used Section 14 in Dewsbury in June, when they refused to allow the EDL to hold its static protest in the town centre and instead penned them in the station car park, well away from the Muslim community they had come to intimidate. The acting Met police commissioner should be urged to do the same, by banning the EDL from holding their protest anywhere near the centre of Tower Hamlets and instructing them to hold it, say, in a fenced-off area of Victoria Park.

If the EDL were allowed to hold a static protest near the centre of Tower Hamlets they would no doubt be escorted by the police to the area where the protest was to be held, so they would effectively get to have a march anyway, with the consequent threat of public disorder that led to their march being banned in the first place.

Update:  See “Full speed ahead for anti-EDL demo: Sat 3 Sept, Tower Hamlets”, UAF news report 25 August 2011

Man accused of hate crime in Oregon mosque arson

CORVALLIS — Federal law enforcement authorities arrested Cody Seth Crawford, 24, Wednesday night on a federal hate crimes indictment in what they say was a racially motivated arson at a Corvallis mosque.

The arrest comes eight months after the Nov. 28 firebombing of the Salman Alfarisi Islamic Center at 610 N.W. Kings Boulevard in Corvallis. Authorities quickly determined the fire, which burned the office of the mosque, was an arson.

The Oregonian, 25 August 2011

Update:   See “Suspect in Corvallis mosque firebombing will remain in jail, judge orders”, The Oregonian, 25 August 2011

Police chief’s futile bid to keep out EDL

The top cop in West Yorkshire has been denied powers to restrict a far-right group’s protests in Calderdale. Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police Sir Norman Bettison has told the Courier he wrote to the Home Office after the English Defence League’s demonstration in Bradford last August, suggesting measures to minimise their impact on communities in his area. But the Home Office turned him down.

“I have no power to stop them coming,” said Sir Norman, who was asked if he would consider stopping the group from protesting because of the massive cost to the force. “After the EDL’s protest in Bradford nearly a year ago I wrote to the Home Office suggesting that they could put in controls,” he said.

His proposals including limiting the number of protesters who could come. He questioned why an area that did not want the group to visit should have to put up with the disruption to the community, businesses and expense to the police and local authority. But the response he received from the Home Office was that there was no likelihood of any restrictions.

Calderdale Council estimates the EDL’s last protest in Halifax, on July 9, cost taxpayers more than £140,000 – at least £1 for every adult in the district.

Halifax Courier, 25 August 2011

London can’t afford to let the EDL march

EDL Dudley2Well, that’s the title given to a letter from a number of Labour Party luminaries published in today’s Guardian, which calls for a ban on the planned English Defence League march through Tower Hamlets on 3 September.

This really is a stupid and entirely counterproductive letter. It completely omits any reference to the political objective of the EDL march – namely to intimidate the Muslim community of East London – and opposes the march purely because of the cost of policing it. It seems to have escaped the attention of the signatories that there is no legal basis for imposing a ban on those grounds.

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NYCLU study examines rise of anti-mosque activities in New York State

NYCLUThe New York Civil Liberties Union on Wednesday released a white paper examining the rise of anti-mosque activities throughout the state.

As you might guess, the paper devotes significant attention to one project in particular, the proposed Park51 community center in Lower Manhattan. One of its developers, real estate broker Sharif El-Gamal, took part in a conference call on the release, along with NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman, the organization’s Advocacy Director Udi Ofer and Prof. Foroque Ahmad Khan, director of the Islamic Center of Long Island.

“The anti-mosque and anti-Muslim sentiment expressed in the opposition to Park51 was not an isolated incident,” Lieberman said, hastening to add that the civil rights group recognizes the right of the mosque’s opponents to speak out.

The report cites nine examples of anti-mosque activity, ranging from the international furor over Park51 to ugly but rather penny-ante vandalism of a mosque in Hudson – many of them occurring during last year’s election cycle, when Mosque Mania ruled the hustings. The report deals with several incidents in which public officials attempted to block the construction or expansion of mosques out of what Lieberman termed “an undifferentiated fear and distrust of their Muslim neighbors”.

Khan noted that too many Americans have little knowledge of their local Muslim communities, a void currently being filled by anti-Islam pundits and activists. “Some people … have made a cottage industry out of this,” he said.

Khan described what he saw as a “double standard”, noting that the vast majority of terrorist acts in North America are not committed by Muslims. He cited coverage of July’s rampage by Sweden’s Anders Breivik and noted a dearth of analysis on his twisted version of Christianity.

Khan praised Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Rep. Jerrold Nadler for “setting the tone” with their opposition to broad-brush intolerance. He noted that one of the promising aftereffects of 9/11 was a strengthening of interfaith and outreach efforts across the country. “That’s the only way you can break down the stereotypes,” he said.

Albany Times Union blog, 24 August 2011

See also NYCLU press release, 24 August 2011

Download the report here