Questions after raid pair release

MuradQuestions are being asked about how the police and intelligence services handled an anti-terror raid in east London after the release of two men. Brothers Abul Koyair, 20, and Mohammed Abdul Kahar, 23, who was shot in the raid, were freed without charge.

Muslim Council of Britain chief Mohammed Abdul Bari said: “The question the community raises is the genuineness of the intelligence.” Mr Bari, who is secretary general of the Muslim council, told the BBC: “It all goes back to intelligence, and the police gave the reason for this massive raid. It all depends on how the police act now. There is an issue of trust.”

Met Police Authority member Murad Qureshi, speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, said: “I think that there were a series of mistakes, which I think that the Met should learn from, and they cover everything from the collecting of intelligence and how you corroborate that to the nature of the surveillance of suspects, through to how the suspects are actually dealt with.” Of particular concern, he said was “how we find ourselves with one of the brothers shot and quite a lot of the slander, quite honestly, which has been out in the press”.

BBC News, 10 June 2006

Secret report brands Muslim police corrupt

A secret high-level Metropolitan police report has concluded that Muslim officers are more likely to become corrupt than white officers because of their cultural and family backgrounds.

The document, which has been seen by the Guardian, has caused outrage among ethnic minorities within the force, who have labelled it racist and proof that there is a gulf in understanding between the police force and the wider Muslim community. The document was written as an attempt to investigate why complaints of misconduct and corruption against Asian officers are 10 times higher than against their white colleagues.

The main conclusions of the study, commissioned by the Directorate of Professional Standards and written by an Asian detective chief inspector, stated: “Asian officers and in particular Pakistani Muslim officers are under greater pressure from the family, the extended family … and their community against that of their white colleagues to engage in activity that might lead to misconduct or criminality.”

It recommended that Asian officers needed special anti-corruption training and is now being considered by a working party of senior staff.

The report argued that British Pakistanis live in a cash culture in which “assisting your extended family is considered a duty” and in an environment in which large amounts of money are loaned between relatives and friends.

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Canadian ‘terror’ suspects: innocent unless proven guilty

“What have been reported in the press are alleged acts and not proven facts. Only a trial by the public courts system – and not the media – can determine the difference…. Canadians should bear in mind that this recent wave of ‘anti-terror’ arrests is not the first. Two years ago, as many as 26 Muslim men were arrested in Toronto in a sweep called ‘Project Thread’ that received widespread international attention and that, according to at least one government official, had uncovered ‘an Al-Qaeda sleeper cell’ in Canada. This statement was proved to be false.”

Rabble news, 8 June 2006

IHRC urgent alert: complain to BBC about Panorama documentary

John Ware“The broadcast journalist John Ware, responsible for last year’s one-sided Panorama programme on British Muslim leadership, is making another documentary about British Muslims. This time he is focusing on the community’s alleged support of Palestinian groups and aims to expose activists’ links with political movements such as Hamas which Ware considers to be a terrorist organisation….

“Ware’s last programme ‘A Question of Leadership’ was supposed to examine the role of the Muslim Council of Britain. Instead, it degenerated into an ‘McCarthyite’ attack on Muslims and their beliefs, overflowing with Islamophobic stereotypes and glaring inaccuracies. John Ware’s pro-Israel bias was also evident in the documentary. He reserved all his criticisms and condemnations for the Palestinians without a word of criticism for the Israelis. The programme resulted in the BBC receiving over 600 complaints in the first week alone and provoked wide spread condemnation by Muslim groups and non Muslims alike….

“IHRC is deeply concerned that once again BBC is being used as platform to unleash another prejudiced and hate-filled attack on the Muslim community, by a journalist whose anti-Muslim prejudice has been fully exposed. IHRC also feels that by choosing a journalist with a personal agenda against Muslims, to present a programme on the Palestine-Israel conflict, the BBC will be unable to fulfill their duty to report with accuracy and impartiality.”

IHRC alert, 8 June 2006

Demonstration on Sunday

Scotland YardSTOP POLICE TERROR. DEFEND CIVIL LIBERTIES. JUSTICE FOR MUSLIMS.
Sunday 11th June, 2pm, Outside Scotland Yard.

RALLY FOR JUSTICE
The police raid in Forest Gate on June 2nd involving some 250 officers was one of the largest single raids in Britain. With the intensification of “terror raids” throughout the country and “trial-by-media” sensationalism, communities are under severe attack and must show unity.

STOP POLICE TERROR
The heavy-handed tactics of the police are proving counterproductive. Instead of increasing security, high profile police “terror” raids have only spread more fear.

JUSTICE FOR MUSLIMS
Despite the Government’s boasts of a diversified society, the criminalisation of Muslim communities and rising Islamophobia are a direct result of Government policies.

DEFEND CIVIL LIBERTIES
The anti-terror legislation is eroding all of our civil rights and the Government intends to extend police powers without the need for accountability.

SUNDAY 11th JUNE
2pm
ASSEMBLE OUTSIDE SCOTLAND YARD
Nearest Tube: St James Park.

For more information call: 07908 750 748 or 07915 063 564

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MPs fear police terror raid will hit community relations

MPs fear police terror raid will hit community relations

By Nigel Morris and Arifa Akbar

Independent, 8 June 2006

Police and the intelligence services have been warned by Muslim leaders and MPs that the Forest Gate raids have had a damaging effect on community relations in the fight against terrorism.

As detectives were granted more time to question two men arrested in east London last week, supporters of a drive against Islamophobia condemned the operation.

Ghayasuddin Siddique, leader of the Muslim parliament, said: “It has been an absolute disaster, it’s shameful… Police and the intelligence services have lost all credibility.”

Dominic Grieve, the Conservative home affairs spokesman, said: “I don’t think you can minimise the adverse impact of events like those of the last week. If somebody has their door kicked down at four in the morning it sends out a very negative impression about the nature of our society.”

He said the raids may prove to have been justified, but if they turned out to be mistaken it would make Muslims feel “confronted and embattled” .

Sadiq Khan, the Labour MP for Tooting, said the police needed to ” reflect on the downside of their activities”. He said: “There’s a concern about the willingness of the community to volunteer information [to the police] if their neighbour, someone down the road, their son has been treated unfairly.”

They were speaking in Westminster at the launch of a commission on ways to combat Islamophobia.

Its chairman, Richard Stone, said: “Police and politicians need to show a bit more sensitivity.”

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‘Blaming all Muslims, or Islam or multiculturalism is just a McCarthyesque witchhunt against a rather powerless minority community in Canada’

No easy answers

Toronto Star, 8 June 2006

By Haroon Siddiqui

Blaming all Muslims, or Islam or multiculturalism, is just a witchhunt against a rather powerless minority community

Dalton McGuinty said it best. He found the alleged Toronto terrorist plot to be both “unsettling and reassuring,” the latter because law enforcement agencies have done their job, removing what has been described as Canada’s greatest terrorism threat.

Now the courts will decide whether that’s what it was.

Let the rule of law prevail, in fair and transparent trials.

If we are hearing some skeptical voices about the dramatic charges, there is a reason. Similar claims made in 2003 against 22 Pakistani and Indian students — that they had planned to topple the CN Tower and the Pickering nuclear reactor — proved to be utterly false.

That episode of incompetence, coupled with the Maher Arar tragedy and the ongoing detention of four terrorism suspects without charge on security certificates, devalued the moral currency of the law enforcement agencies — always a liability in a democracy.

This time, however, authorities seem to be on firmer ground.

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Losing the plot

“Poor Melanie Phillips. Her new book, Londonistan, which argues that the London attacks of 7 July 2005 were the culmination of a sinister Islamist conspiracy to infiltrate Britain and bring our civilisation to its knees, has hit the shelves just a few weeks after the government’s report into the bombings revealed that, in fact, they were the work of four ordinary blokes with no clear links to al-Qaeda….

“In another piece of bad timing, one of the main endorsers of the book – the Iranian author Amir Taheri, who shares the view that radical Islam poses a potent threat to the world – was exposed, at the end of May, as the source of a mistaken story about extremist antics in Iran. Taheri claimed in a column that, in an eerie echo of Nazi Germany, a new Iranian law will force religious minorities to wear coloured badges ‘to indicate their non-Islamic faith’. Canada’s National Post reported on it, as did Phillips in her blog, where she described the law as ‘horrific’, a ‘global obscenity’. But the story, in the words of Maurice Motammed, Iran’s only Jewish MP, was ‘totally false’. The National Post has now published a grovelling retraction.

“Most journalists would be mortified if their book was published just as an official account ripped strips off many of their central claims and as one of their supporters was shown to be unreliable. But Phillips is not most journalists. Something has happened to her in recent years. This once fine writer has become obsessed with radical Islam, to the extent that she will not let the facts dent her deeply held conviction that an evil army of crazed Muslims has launched ‘an attack on the historic core of western liberty’, and that the need to confront this army is ‘no less critical than when [Britain and the US] stood shoulder to shoulder against Nazi Germany’.”

Brendan O’Neill in the New Statesman, 12 June 2006


It’s always good to read a demolition of Mad Mel. But O’Neill – editor of Spiked, the online successor to the Revolutionary Communist Party’s Living Marxism – undermines his own case. His take on 7/7– “What Phillips presents as the handiwork of ‘clerical fascism’ looks increasingly like Britain’s Columbine, a murderous stunt executed by four bored and overgrown adolescents who had nothing better to do” – dismisses concerns about “jihadist” terrorism as just another moral panic. This might serve the ex-RCPers’ speciality of winding people up by provocatively adopting controversial positions, but the reality is that the 7/7 bombers were clearly motivated by the desire to punish ordinary Londoners for the crimes of western imperialism, and they found ideological inspiration in a perverted interpretation of Islam. It is necessary to point out that this is an interpretation rejected by the overwhelming majority of Muslims. Describing the bombers as “bored and overgrown adolescents who had nothing better to do”, however, is just silly.

Geert Wilders blasts Queen Beatrix over mosque visit

geert_wildersRacist Dutch MP Geert Wilders has attacked Queen Beatrix and Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende following the monarch’s visit to a mosque.

Queen Beatrix removed her shoes on entering the Mobarak Mosque in The Hague on 3 June and refrained from shaking hands with Muslim men in accordance with their strict religious beliefs. The visit was to mark the 50th anniversary of the building of the mosque. Wilders said on Wednesday he was angry with the Queen and Balkenende. In an extraordinary outburst, he accused them of “dhimmi behaviour”.

Balkenende got involved when he made a call for tolerance for all religions during a speech on Tuesday evening. Stating that Muslims also have a right to freedom of religion, he said being allowed this freedom helped people feel more welcome in society. He held up the Queen’s visit to the mosque as an example of tolerance in action.

Wilders said he was “irritated purple” at the Queen’s decision not to shake hands with men at the mosque. “The Queen and Prime Minister Balkenende are putting Dutch norms and values in a bargain sale. Particularly now that the behaviour of the Queen is being presented by the Prime Minister as an example of tolerance,” Wilders said.

The MP said the Queen and Balkenende are far too tolerant while the number of mosques in the Netherlands is fast increasing and more imams are coming here. “We must instead make the case for Dutch norms and values”, Wilders said.

Expatica, 7 June 2006

Canadian Muslim leaders fear backlash, appeal for calm

Muslim leaders in Ontario are worried their communities are becoming targets for violence and they are calling for calm after an alleged terrorist bombing plot was revealed, resulting the arrest of 17 people this week. Faith leaders say a backlash occurred in the days after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in New York and Washington, D.C. Now a backlash is happening again, starting with threats and vandalism.

Windshields were smashed Saturday night in the parking lot outside the International Muslims Organization Mosque in Rexdale. Windows in the mosque were also broken by vandals. “This is our mosque (and) to see an attack like this is hard on us,” Imam Hamid Slimi said Wednesday.

Leaders of nearly every Muslim community in the Greater Toronto Area met with Lt. Governor James K. Bartleman on Wednesday to discuss their fears that the broken glass may be the start of religiously-motivated attacks. “We are in a phase of danger … when it comes to our security,” Slimi said. He asked Bartleman for support to prevent potential attacks against Muslims.

While more incidents of vandalism have not occurred since Saturday, Slimi said the organization has received many threatening email messages. He added that the Muslim community is committed to ensuring the security of the country. Slimi also appealed for mercy for the families of the 17 accused, saying they are being “abused.”

CTV, 7 June 2006