Indy joins Daily Mail in promoting sharia hysteria

Christina Patterson“In this country, we don’t have Sharia courts – courts which turn a religious code for living into an actual legal system – but we do have at least 85 Sharia councils. And we have a growing number of people who are trying to turn whole areas, like Waltham Forest, into ‘Sharia controlled zones’, and who are sticking stickers saying things like ‘no alcohol, no gambling, no music or concerts, no porn or prostitution, no drugs, no smoking’ in shop windows, and saying that they will patrol the streets to enforce the Sharia code.”

Christina Patterson in the Independent, 3 August 2011

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EDL march will go ahead in Telford, with restrictions

Strict conditions are set to be imposed by police on a proposed march by the English Defence League which is to take place in Wellington Town Centre on Saturday, 13 August.

The march will take place between 1pm and 3pm and follow a police designated route from Church Street, turning right into Market Street, right into Bridge Road, right again into Queen Street and returning to Church Street.

In a move aimed at minimising the impact of the demonstration on traders and the wider community the police are using powers under the 1986 Public Order Act which will stipulate when and where EDL supporters may gather and the route their march must take.

Shropshire Live, 4 August 2011


Telford & Wrekin Council statement on the march

Telford & Wrekin Council say they disappointed that the EDL march will be going ahead.

Cllr Shaun Davies, cabinet member for Community Cohesion, said: “The overwhelming voice from the community in Telford, and in particular in Wellington, is that people do not want this march in our town.

“The Council would not want the march to go ahead but we understand and appreciate the very difficult position that the Police are in.

“The law and free speech allows for demonstrations and only under very clear criteria can these be stopped. The police have told us that these criteria have not been met and therefore the march goes ahead.

“The Police have the experience, resources and expertise in handling such matters and we continue to work very closely with them to minimise any disruption this march may cause and most importantly protect the safety of the community.

“While Telford is united against this unwelcome march, it is very important the Council, the community and all our partners continue to get behind the police and to make sure it has as little impact as possible on people and daily life in the borough.”

The EDL are complaining that the police will be restricting their march under Sections 12 and 14 of the Public Order Act. However, given that EDL protests regularly result in serious public disorder, there is no obvious reason why the police could not have applied for a total ban on the march under Section 13.

Racist went on ‘wicked’ campaign of harassment against Muslim shop owner

A racist man went on a “wicked and upsetting” campaign of harassment against a newsagent after claiming the shop owner stole his £10m winning lottery ticket.

James Young produced leaflets claiming shopkeeper Imran Hussain was a “Muslim lottery ticket thief” then posted them to shops and homes near the newsagent in Broughty Ferry, Dundee.

Young at one stage told Mr Hussain: “You’re a Muslim – maybe the Koran tells you to cheat people.” He also made covert videos in Thornton’s Newsagents, run by Mr Hussain, then posted one of them on YouTube. The YouTube video – titled Lottery ticket thief – was accompanied by text branding Mr Hussain a “Muslim thief” and claiming he had “conned old people”.

He was later arrested after going into the shop in the city’s Gray Street and threatening Mr Hussain’s wife, Shubnum, stating he would kill them both.

Fiscal depute Ross Cargill told Dundee Sheriff Court on Monday: “The accused first entered Mr Hussain’s shop on April 3 this year and claimed he handed over a winning Euromillions lottery ticket to a member of staff.

“He stated that the member of staff must have kept the ticket for himself. On April 13 the accused came back in and said he had contacted Camelot about the ticket and was going to the police and Mr Hussain agreed that was the correct course of action. Unknown to Mr Hussain the accused filmed the conversation with a camera located in the pocket of his top.”

Young, of Aboyne Avenue, Dundee, pled guilty to a racially aggravated breach of the peace and to uttering threats against Mr and Mrs Hussain.

Mr Cargill added: “The accused cannot remember the numbers on the ticket or prove it was a winner.”

Sheriff Alistair Duff described Young’s behaviour as “nasty harassment” and warned him he could face jail. He told the accused: “I take the view that this is extremely serious bad behaviour. The reality is that whether it is imagined or real injustice your behaviour towards the gentleman was wicked and upsetting.”

Young will be sentenced later this month.

STV, 1 August 2011

How Policy Exchange and the Centre for Social Cohesion encourage the Cold War on British Muslims

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In a report published today, Spinwatch examines the Centre for Social Cohesion and Policy Exchange: two key right-wing think-tanks involved in the debate on Islam and multiculturalism which are thought to have influenced the Coalition Government’s new Prevent strategy.

The report, which was completed before the recent terrorist attacks in Norway, argues that right-wing think-tanks have understated the rise of Islamophobia on the far-right and in some cases condoned the rise of groups such as the English Defence League because of their own links to the “counterjihad movement”.

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Mayor Lutfur Rahman’s speech to United East End public meeting July 29th 2011

Mayor_Rahman_signs_book_of_condolences_at_Norwegian_Embassy
Mayor Rahman signs book of condolences at Norwegian Embassy

This is the speech given by Lutfur Rahman, Mayor of Tower Hamlets, at the United East End rally on 29 July.

Good evening and Assalamu Alaikum.

Thank you all for attending this wonderful display of community unity in Tower Hamlets. I know the dangers of extremism has been in your minds this week in the aftermath of the horrors committed in Norway.

I know that your hearts will have been moved, like mine has, by the grief of the Norwegian people.

So earlier today, I was both proud and saddened to go as your Mayor to Norwegian Embassy. I went with a delegation of faith and community leaders from our borough, to offer condolences and solidarity to all the people of Norway from all the people of Tower Hamlets.

And I came away from that visit more committed and determined to a very simple message from my administration – there is no place for hate in Tower Hamlets.

There is no place for hate against people on the basis of sexual identity.

There is no place for hate against people on the basis of racial identity.

There is no place for hate against people on the basis of religious identity.

We are One Tower Hamlets.

We are not going to let the preachers of hate and extremism, whatever community they come from, divide us.

And we certainly have no intention of the letting the EDL divide us!

Because when the man responsible for the mass slaughter of dozens of Norwegian teenagers boasts about his strong links with EDL leaders;

when he brags about his 600 EDL friends on Facebook;

when he tells the EDL to ‘keep up the good work’;

we all know only too well what the EDL’s idea of ‘good work’ is.

Their idea of ‘good work’ is when they sow the seeds of hate and intolerance.

And the sole purpose of their visit to Tower Hamlets on September 3 is to promote the politics of hatred and division on our streets.

That’s why one of the messages that must go from this meeting is to the Home Secretary, Theresa May, and that message is this:

We don’t want the EDL in our borough;

The people of Tower Hamlets don’t want the EDL in our borough;

And you, Home Secretary, have to the power to stop the EDL from coming into our borough on September 3.

But if the EDL do march, we know full well what their intentions are.

The Norwegian killer Anders Breivik praised them for it; they want to try ‘lure’ the local community, and especially Muslim communities, into street violence.

They want images on our TV screens of Muslim and white youth fighting on our streets.

They want to use these images as evidence of our communities at war with each other so they can claim multicultural Britain does not work

We know the EDL want to set us a trap.

Well, my message to them is this; we are not going to fall into your trap!

Between now and September 3 Tower Hamlets is not going to be a divided borough – it is going to be a united borough.

And on September 3 we are going to have a massive, united and peaceful celebration of multiculturalism and anti-racism.

We are going to have inter-faith groups, LBGT groups, youth groups, pensioners groups, Muslims, Jews, Christians and Atheists; members of all political parties and members of no political parties; all standing together to send one message:

We are One Tower Hamlets.

We are a United Tower Hamlets.

And we are not going to let the EDL or any other bunch of extremists divide us.

Muslim police officers targeted by EDL

Britain’s National Association of Muslim Police (Namp) will deliver a letter to Theresa May, the Home Secretary, stating that its officers have been targeted by radicalised members of the EDL. It details an unresolved investigation of an unidentified man arrested last year with “quantities of fireworks/devices” alongside names of Muslim police officers circled on whiteboards for attacks.

The letter also outlines concerns that EDL leader Stephen Lennon suggested similar events to those witnessed in Norway could be “years away” if his organisation’s concerns were not addressed.

Independent on Sunday, 31 July 2011

What will it take to stop Paul Dacre’s anti-Muslim scaremongering?

Paul DacreIn view of the role played by baseless fantasies about a Muslim takeover of the West in inspiring the Norway terrorist attacks, even the most insensitive editor of a right-wing paper might have been expected to give anti-Muslim scaremongering at least a temporary rest, in deference to the 77 people who lost their lives at the hands of the murderer whose views were moulded by that sort of irresponsible journalism.

Particularly so in the case of the Daily Mail, given that articles from the paper on the subject of encroaching sharia (herehere and here) are cited several times in Anders Breivik’s 2083 manifesto, along with even more numerous references to the paper’s coverage of immigration issues (hereherehereherehere and here).

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Suspended prison sentence for EDL supporter who spray-painted graffiti at mosque site

A Hucknall man who spray-painted racist graffiti at a site earmarked for a Muslim mosque has avoided being sent straight to prison.

Christopher Payne (25), of Beardsmore Grove, was with a gang who also placed a severed pig’s head on a pole at the spot. He admitted daubing the slogan “No Mosque Here, EDL Notts” on the pavement at the site near Collington Way, off Derby Road, West Bridgford. EDL is a reference to the English Defence League, of which Payne was a member. The vandalism and head were discovered by a member of the public on Thursday June 23.

Payne appeared at Nottingham Magistrates Court for sentencing after admitted racially-aggravated public order offences. He also confessed to causing racially or religiously-aggravated harassment, alarm or distress and racially or religiously-aggravated criminal damage.

At the time of a previous court hearing in June, Payne had been an events organiser for the EDL. But at the sentencing hearing, the court heard he had since left the group.

Payne was sentenced to six weeks’ imprisonment, suspended for a year. He was also told to pay a £250 fine and £85 costs and complete 100 hours of community service. He was also banned from West Bridgford for 12 months.

Hucknall Dispatch, 30 July 2011

Mad Mel says left-wing Jews are assisting Muslim extremists who ‘want to destroy our way of life’

You would have thought that the revelations about her role in inspiring Anders Breivik’s hatred of Labour traitors, who he believed had conspired to destroy national identity by flooding their countries with immigrants in pursuit of the warped ideology of multiculturalism, might have prompted a period of quiet reflection on the part of Melanie Phillips. Not a bit of it. Phillips has a piece in this week’s Jewish Chronicle belligerently defending the paper’s political editor Martin Bright against his critics. According to Phillips, Bright is “a fine and principled journalist” who “exposes both Islamists who want to destroy our way of life and the useful idiots whom they manipulate”. (Presumably she has in mind inaccurate, ill-researched exercises in witch-hunting like this.) Continue reading