Something rotten in the state of Denmark

“… long before these drawings came into the public domain, there was widespread apprehension among Danish Muslims over the way they and their religious affiliation were presented in the media. The image projected in the Danish media of Islam has been one of a faith that did not undergo a reformation and renaissance similar to Christianity, and is thus stuck in the middle ages. The drawings are simply a culmination of several years of media persecution of the Muslim minority in Denmark. Even worse is the role elected politicians have played in stoking this fire. It is not unusual for certain politicians to make ill-willed and mistaken, but also common, reference that Muslims are immigrants, and immigrants are badly integrated and therefore the root of all evil in Danish society.”

Zubair Butt Hussain in the Daily Star, 10 January 2006

Muslim bashing seemingly in vogue

Muslim bashing seemingly in vogue
Vitamin flier portraying Sen. Durbin in headwear now a sign of the times

By Adam Jadhav

St Louis Post-Dispatch, 9 January 2006

What in the world do dietary supplements have to do with turbans and terrorism?

That political head-scratcher confronted at least some vitamin buyers around the nation who found a flier with their mail-order nutrients carrying the bold headline, “Get a Turban for Durbin!”

An image shows Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, wearing the headwrap, common in parts of the Middle East and south Asia and sacred religious garb in some faiths, including the entire Sikh religion.

The flier’s kicker: “Keep Congressional Terrorists At Bay.” The flier was distributed last month by a pro-vitamin and supplement group.

Critics say the flier is yet another example of Muslim bashing. The designer of the flier, who has since pulled it, admits that it was over the line but said he put it out to draw attention to what he thinks is improper action by Durbin.

Continue reading

British Muslim group declares new jihad – twice!

Hide under your beds, Robert Spencer has uncovered “A new declaration of war on Britain and the West – from Omar Bakri, formerly one of Britain’s highest-profile jihadists”.

Jihad Watch, 9 January 2006

I think Robert must be running short of jihadists to frighten us with. He’s already announced this “new declaration of war”, based on the same YNet story, back in October last year.

Jihad Watch, 20 October 2005

Islamophobia in Denmark

A balanced and informed article from the NYT  by Dan Bilefsky on the controversy in Denmark arising from the decision by the newspaper Jyllands-Posten to publish cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, including one in which he is shown wearing a turban shaped as a bomb with a burning fuse. Bilefsky places the issue in the context of “an intensifying anti-immigrant climate that is stigmatizing minorities and radicalizing young Muslims” and the rise of the far-right Danish People’s Party.

New York Times, 8 January 2006

It is articles like this, of course, that lead to angry denunciations of the NYT by Jihad Watch et al.

Muslims have always hated Jews, Mad Mel claims

There was an interesting debate on Radio 4 yesterday between Melanie Phillips and Tony Lerman, incoming director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, on “Muslim anti-semitism”. Lerman argued that a rise in anti-Jewish sentiment is largely due to resentment at Israeli policy towards the Palestinians. Mad Mel, needless to say, asserted that Muslims are by nature and tradition anti-semites. Because Lerman, who has a rational and liberal approach to this issue, rejects her own demented Islamophobia, Phillips now proposes that the Jewish community should withhold funding from the JPR.

Melanie Phillips’s Diary, 8 January 2006

The Radio 4 debate between Lerman and Phillips can be heard (audio) here.

Muslim and gay

“Sir Iqbal is regarded as a moderate and his comments were the latest in a long line of similar statements from mainstream Islamic leaders. These have in turn provoked outbursts of Islamophobia from sections of the gay community, with some activists at the Gay Pride parade last year berating Muslim marchers as ‘suicide bombers’ and a gay magazine categorising Islam as a ‘barmy doctrine’.”

A reasonably balanced article from Ben Hoyle in the Times, 7 January 2005

Posted in UK

March for Omar Deghayes

Supporters of Omar Deghayes and six other British detainees being held in Guantánamo Bay have called a demonstration to demand that the US authorities release them and shut down its network of secret detention centres. The march will take place on Saturday 21 January in London.

Meanwhile, lawyers for Omar and the other detainees have launched a court challenge aimed at forcing the British government to do more to help free them. Omar’s family came to Britain in the early 1980s as refugees from Libya. His father, a trade union activist and lawyer, was murdered by Colonel Gadaffi’s regime.

Demand justice for the British residents in Guantánamo Bay, Saturday 21 January. Assemble 12 noon, Tothill Street, central London, nearest tube St James’s Park.

Go to www.save-omar.org.uk for more information.

Socialist Worker, 7 January 2006

‘The pope is no dhimmi’

US right-winger Hugh Hewitt interviews Father Joseph Fessio, Provost of Ave Maria University in Naples, Florida – mainly on the subject of the threat posed by Islam to the West. They both endorse Mark Steyn’s recent article claiming that higher birthrates among Muslim communities in Europe are bringing about the extinction of Western civilisation. Interesting insight into right-wing Catholics’ view of Islam – and that of Pope Bendedict in particular.

Hugh Hewitt blog, 6 January 2006

Robert Spencer welcomes the revelation that “the Pope is no dhimmi”. Dhimmi Watch, 6 January 2006

Capitalism, racism and Islamophobia

“… racism has continued into the 21st century – though today it typically justifies itself on ‘cultural’ grounds rather than crude biological claims. This continued existence of racism points to just how fundamental it is to the capitalist system. And some racist ideologies are more obviously generated by capitalism than others.

“Take anti-Muslim racism – also known as Islamophobia. We have seen an upsurge of such prejudice, often given a liberal gloss, over the last four years. It’s not hard to fathom why. It is basically the ideology used to justify the ‘war on terror’, which is itself part of the imperialist project of the US state to dominate the globe.

“We can compare the treatment of Muslims today with the treatment of Jews in the early 20th century. They were seen as an alien presence in European cities – a competitive threat to indigenous workers at home, and, in the crazed ideology of anti-Semites, a threat to the nation from without thanks to their supposed control of powerful institutions.

“It’s not just the hardened racists of the BNP who are targeting Muslims. So are the government and the establishment, in their own particular way. Instead of examining the real reasons for terrorism, which would lead to them having to denounce their own policies, they look to a ‘group’ explanation. There must be something wrong with Muslims, they say. The problem is ‘Muslim terrorism’. And Muslim, here, is essentially a racial category, as anyone who has been stopped and searched for ‘looking Muslim’ will tell you.

“You can see the way this leads to renewed racism just by contrasting the current approach to the response to the last bombings in London, in 1999. When BNP supporter David Copeland bombed Brixton, Brick Lane and Soho, there was no demand on the ‘white community’, or even the BNP, to apologise. But today Muslims have to come out again and again to show the world how sorry they are for the 7 July bombings, under threat of being seen as an enemy within if they don’t condemn louder than anyone else.

“So, beneath official talk of multiculturalism and opposition to racism is, in fact, the creation of racial prejudice and stereotyping because those responsible for the system cannot admit to its fundamental faults.”

Kerri Parke and Kevin Ovenden in Socialist Worker, 7 January 2006

Terror suspect facing US extradition

Terror suspect faces US extraditionPeace campaigners condemned a court ruling yesterday allowing the extradition of a British-born terror suspect to the US, where he risks an unfair trial and even torture.

District Judge Timothy Workman ruled at Bow Street magistrates court that Yorkshire-born Haroon Rashid Aswat, who is accused of trying to set up al-Qaida training camps in the state of Oregon between 1999 and 2000, can be extradited to the US.

Home Secretary Charles Clarke has up to two months to approve the extradition of Mr Aswat, who denies the charges. His lawyers have expressed grave concern that he could end up in the notorious Guantánamo Bay detention centre if extradited.

Socialist Campaign Group of Labour MPs chairman John McDonnell said that he was “appalled” by the court’s decision and agreed that “no-one can be sure that this British-born man will receive a fair trial in the US.”

Morning Star, 6 January 2006