Rushdie resists religious hatred law

“In Europe, the bombing of a railway station in Madrid and the murder of the Dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh are being seen as warnings that the secular principles that underlie any humanist democracy need to be defended and reinforced. Even before these atrocities occurred, the French decision to ban religious attire such as Islamic headscarves from state schools had the support of the entire political spectrum….

“The exception to European secularism can be found in Britain, or at least in the government of the devoutly Christian and increasingly authoritarian Tony Blair, which is presently trying to steamroller parliament into passing a law against ‘incitement to religious hatred’, in a cynical vote-getting attempt to placate British Muslim spokesmen, in whose eyes just about any critique of Islam is offensive.”

Salman Rushdie in the Guardian, 14 March 2005

Interview: William Montgomery Watt

The Reverend Professor William Montgomery Watt has written over 30 books including Islamic Political Thought (1968) and Muslim-Christian Encounters: Perceptions and Misconceptions (1991). In Scotland he has been a member of the ecumenical Iona Community since 1960. Amongst Islamic scholars he has been held in an esteem described as “most reverential.” The Muslim press have called him “the Last Orientalist.” This interview was conducted in 1999, his ninetieth year, at his home in Dalkeith. With Professor Watt’s approval and careful agreement of the final text, it uses both spoken material and statements drawn from some of his most important articles of recent years. It is, in a sense, a distillation of his life’s work.

Alastair McIntosh’s website

Met faces claim of Muslim racism

The Metropolitan police are being threatened with an £8m legal claim over allegations that they discriminate against the Middle Eastern community in Britain’s richest area.

One of the leading firms of Middle Eastern lawyers in London has filed an official complaint over the lack of police action when crimes are reported by Muslims.

Sir Ian Blair, new head of the Metropolitan police, has agreed to investigate the allegations made primarily against officers in Kensington and Chelsea, west London.

However, the police may still face an embarrassing legal case at a time when they are trying to win over the community whose assistance is critical in the fight against terrorism.

Sunday Times, 13 March 2005

Muslim miscarries in cell after grilling at airport

A Muslim woman detained by officials at Glasgow Airport suffered a miscarriage in an immigration cell, the Sunday Herald can reveal.

Marina Miraj, a Canadian Afghan, collapsed in the airport detention room last month after being questioned for hours by immigration staff.

The woman, who is in her 30s and was three months pregnant, was rushed to Paisley’s Royal Alexandra Hospital after being found by airport officials on the cell floor.

Miraj had flown into the UK from Toronto to make plans to settle in Glasgow with her husband. She claims the stress of the interrogation and detention contributed to the miscarriage and is now considering legal action.

She described the ordeal as: “the worst experience of my life.” She added: “I will never be able to forget how I lost my baby in a police cell.”

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‘A vote for intolerance’ – Cohen defends the right to incite religious hatred

Another diatribe from Nick Cohen against the extension of race relations laws to cover incitement to religious hatred.

He is particularly upset about Mike O’Brien naming Evan Harris as a leading Lib Dem opponent of the new law – on the grounds that the person O’Brien “singled out for attack wasn’t even on the Lib Dem front bench. All that appeared to distinguish him was that he was the only Lib Dem MP to come from a Jewish family”.

Yes, well, apart from the fact that Harris is a militant secularist who’s achieved notoriety among British Muslims, not least because of his enthusiastic support for the French hijab ban. Or hadn’t you noticed that, Nick?

Observer, 13 March 2005

Complain about ‘Immigration is a Time Bomb’

“Many of you may have seen last night’s ‘Immigration is a time bomb’ programme by Rod Liddle…. Islam is caricatured and presented as a homophobic, intolerant faith, that inspires murders of the ‘defenders of freedom of speech’, such as Theo Van Gogh. His death is attributed to the fact that Holland paid the price for ‘allowing immigrants to do what the hell they wanted’. This was accompanied by pictures of Muslim women in hijab, shopping in a market place. This was one of the worse pieces of racist, populist programming that have been broadcast on this issue. Please register a strong complaint to Channel 4.”

National Assembly Against Racism press release, 11 March 2005

BNP welcomes Rod Liddle programme

Rod Liddle“Once again, Channel 4 has shown a welcome willingness – albeit on still all too rare occasions – to air ‘politically incorrect’ views. Tonight’s anti-immigration polemic by Rod Liddle wasn’t perfect by any means, but by the woeful standards of the self-censoring liberal-left prigs at the BBC it was very much, a breath of fresh air….

“Let’s have another about the clear links between Koranic teachings about the lowly status of women and Kufrs (Unbelievers) and the spreading cancer of male Muslim gangs preying on young teenage white and Sikh girls. Let’s have a third about the shocking level of support for al-Qaeda and other Islamic terrorists among British-born Muslims.”

The BNP welcomes Rod Liddle’s Channel 4 programme ‘Immigration is a Time Bomb’.

BNP news article, 10 March 2005

Labour’s flawed policy on immigration is a time bomb for Britain (Rod Liddle claims)

“Back in the Fifties and Sixties, it was expected of immigrants to adopt British customs and values: the terrible concept of multiculturalism hadn’t taken root.

“However, today we welcome people who, for example, bring with them a hostile interpretation of Islam and have no real wish to integrate: in many cases, they despise our way of life. Furthermore, even some members of the indigenous Muslim community have been radicalised over the past 15 years.

“Islam is becoming more conservative and less amenable to assimilation. The West is becoming more liberal. We run the risk of becoming a country with a large (and growing) disaffected minority that shares little of our commitment to freedom of religion, freedom of speech, sexual equality and democracy.”

Rod Liddle in the Daily Express, 10 March 2005

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