Supporter of ‘non-racist’ EDL fined over racist graffiti

A man has been ordered to pay compensation after graffiting racist abuse on the doors of Hebden Bridge train station.

James Allen, 62, of Wood Villas, Hebden Bridge, appeared unrepresented at Calderdale Magistrates’ Court. He admitted causing £700 damage and possessing two bags of cannabis.

On seven different occasions between April 23 and June 7, station staff found graffiti supporting the English Defence League daubed on the back of doors in the male toilets.

He was given a 12-month community order and told to complete 60 hours of unpaid work, pay compensation of £100 and £85 towards costs.

Halifax Courier, 27 June 2011

Sayeeda Warsi on Melanie Phillips

Baroness_WarsiSayeeda Warsi rolls back in her chair and bursts out laughing. “I don’t read her, actually. I call her Mad Mel,” Lady Warsi says of Daily Mail columnist Melanie Phillips, who has denounced her as “stupid”.

Warsi, a proud Yorkshirewoman, rarely pulls her punches. As the first Muslim to sit as a full member of the British cabinet, she fell foul of Phillips in January after she declared in the Sternberg lecture that Islamophobia had “crossed the threshold of middle-class respectability”.

Phillips’ barbed response was to describe Warsi, the Tory co-chair, on her Spectator blog as “at best a stupid mouthpiece of those who are bamboozling Britain into Islamisation, and at worst a supporter of that process”.

Guardian, 24 June 2011

Ham at Bristol mosque was ‘revenge’ for poppy burning

David FosterA man who was high on drugs defiled a mosque and insulted its members by hanging slices of ham on the railings and in the shoes of worshippers while they prayed in an act of “religious revenge”. David Foster told a court that he carried out the highly offensive act to give Muslims a “taste of their own medicine” as retaliation for extremists burning poppies.

Foster, 22, and Jamie Knowlson, 30, were caught on CCTV hanging the ham on the railings of the Al-Basera mosque in Wade Street, St Jude’s in the early hours of January 9. The CCTV showed them returning to Redwood House at about 6.30am, a homeless hostel opposite, and the mosque’s caretaker, Abdi Djmaa followed to complain. As Mr Djmaa returned to the mosque he heard someone shouting “bad meat”, “girls” and “the next visit will be harder”.

Foster was due to face trial, but changed his mind and pleaded guilty at Bristol Magistrates’ Court via video link from Bristol Prison to causing racial or religiously aggravated harassment.

Prosecuting, May Li said: “At 6.30am two men were seen skewering slices of ham on the railings outside the Al-Baseera mosque. The clerk of the mosque went to the Little George Street entrance, where people leave shoes for prayer. There were 12 slices of ham on the floor, and some of it was in people’s shoes, and pork inside a takeaway box was left in the vicinity.”

CCTV footage showed Foster and Knowlson running off to Redwood House. Police first arrested Knowlson at the house, and later Foster. In interview, he said: “I haven’t got a clue what happened, I was out of my mind on drugs. I woke up to find police were there saying I put ham in the mosque.”

But he then told officers he put the ham in the mosque in retaliation for Muslims publicly burning poppies, something which has not been done at this mosque. He said: “It is not acceptable that they can go around burning our poppies. They can have a bit of their own medicine if they want to go around burning poppies.”

Foster will be sentenced at Bristol Crown Court next month. Earlier this month Knowlson was given a six-month suspended prison sentence and 150 hours’ unpaid work.

Mubarak Mohamud, one of the three imams, or teachers, at the mosque, said the mosque was against poppy burning. “We want to respect others and expect others to respect us in return. It is sad that our community is carrying on with its own faith and minding its own business, yet suffers when someone does something like this in retaliation for something we didn’t do,” he said.

Bristol Evening Post, 22 June 2011

Posted in UK

‘Muslim intimidation’ has struck fear in the ‘British Christian majority’, claims Benny Morris

Benny MorrisIsraeli historian Benny Morris has written an account of last week’s visit to the London School of Economics where he addressed a meeting on the subject of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.

The visit understandably provoked some controversy, given Morris’s support for ethnic cleansing and his bigoted comments about Muslims, and he complains that he was harangued by demonstrators on his way to the lecture theatre. (“Several spoke in broken, obviously newly acquired, English.”)

And what conclusion does Morris draw from this experience of political opponents exercising their legitimate right to protest against him? He writes: “Uncurbed, Muslim intimidation in the public domain of people they see as disagreeing with them is palpable and palpably affecting the British Christian majority among whom they live, indeed, cowing them into silence. One senses real fear….”

Of course, such comments are hardly unexpected, coming from a man who is on record as stating that “the phenomenon of the mass Muslim penetration into the West and their settlement there is creating a dangerous internal threat”.

However, imagine the outrage that would result if a Palestinian speaker at the LSE had been harangued by Zionist students and responded by writing: “Uncurbed, Jewish intimidation in the public domain of people they see as disagreeing with them is palpable and palpably affecting the British Christian majority among whom they live, indeed, cowing them into silence. One senses real fear….”

One thing is certain, that individual would never again be invited to speak at the LSE.