Allow hijabs, say Quebec soccer players

FIFA hijab protestA group of Montreal women gathered Thursday to protest a Quebec soccer association’s decision to sack a referee because she wears a hijab. The protestors also called for the end of a controversial policy that bans headscarfs during soccer games.

The demonstraters – who played a pickup game near Montreal’s old port – said the association’s position is unacceptable.

Headscarfs are also banned by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association, which governs international soccer. “We’re asking FIFA and any other organizations to get out of women’s wardrobes,” said Sana Saeed, who organized the protest.

Saeed was one of about a dozen women who wore hijabs Thursday afternoon as they played soccer to protest the firing of Sarah Benkirane – a 15-year old who officiated soccer games for two years in the West Island area of Montreal, and off island in Vaudreuil.

They also held their protest to show that it is possible to play soccer safely while wearing a headscarf. FIFA bans the hijab on the field saying it restricts a player’s breathing.

Naajia Isa, who has played soccer in Singapore where she said the hijab is more widely accepted, disagrees. “They don’t look at you and see the headscarf … they see a student, a mother, a daughter,” said Isa.

It was The Lac St. Louis Regional Soccer Association that fired Benkirane in June. At the time, it said it follows FIFA rules and won’t reverse its decision on hijabs.

The province’s soccer federation said Tuesday that Canada’s parallel organization also follows the FIFA rule prohibiting the hijab, and to change the rules, Benkirane would have to address the world soccer association.

In February 2007, five teams from across Canada walked out of a soccer tournament in Laval, Que., because a Muslim girl was ejected for wearing a hijab. FIFA upheld its rule banning the hijab the following week.

In early June, FIFA upheld a decision to prevent Iran’s women’s team from playing a 2012 Olympic qualifier game wearing head scarves.

CBC, 8 July 2011

See also “FIFA’s hijab hangup”, NOW Magazine, 7 July 2011

EDL launches ‘summer of hate’, holds anti-Islam protests in four towns and cities

EDL Bradford placardsThe English Defence League (EDL) is to march against against Islam today in four towns and cities.

Anti-fascists will put on counter-protests against what they have described as a “summer of hate” by the EDL. Hundreds of police are expected to be on duty to prevent a repeat of violent scenes at previous events.

In Cambridge, EDL supporters will march in opposition to plans to build a mosque in the Mill Road area. A rival demonstration by Unite Against Fascism (UAF) will also be staged as thousands of families are expected to attend the city’s Big Weekend celebrations of live music.

Both sides will also be taking to the streets in Plymouth. The EDL has been distributing leaflets in the city centre with pamphlets saying “defend our culture”.

A planned EDL march in Derby was called off although opponents will still hold a Love Music Hate Racism festival at different venues in the city.

EDL will be staging its first demonstration in Middlesbrough, again over plans to build a mosque.

Independent, 9 July 2011

New South Wales: Liberal Party adviser ‘terminated’ after anti-Islam comments

Joseph AdamsThe O’Farrell government has been embarrassed by a Liberal adviser who posted anti-Islamic comments online, including a description of the Prophet Muhammad as ”the first terrorist of Islam”.

Joseph Adams, who worked in the electorate office of the Smithfield Liberal, Andrew Rohan, was sacked on Friday. Mr Adams had angered some of his 1000 Facebook friends – which include 15 state government MPs and four ministers – with selected excerpts from the Koran which he said prove Islam promotes killing, not love.

He was labelled a “bigot” and the ”biggest f—ing racist ever” by shocked friends. A record of his posts between March 24 and June 17, obtained by The Sun-Herald, show the criticism only spurred him on to make more offensive remarks.

“The religious babble you refer to is Islam,” he commented on June 4. “There was no war. It was terrorism. Muhammad was the first terrorist in the name of Islam.” He followed up with: “Why are you getting upset? I’m not the one who is teaching others to kill in the name of Islam. Mohommed is not my hero.” On March 24, he taunted “friend” Faten Dabs with the comment: “If you leave Islam it is HALAL for you to be EXECUTED. Lol. No wonder people are afraid to leave Islam.”

After being branded a bigot on Facebook , he responded: “Your biblical quotes are as ridiculous as your comparisons. I guess you never paid attention at Sunday school. Jesus spoke in parables. Mohommed on the other hand gave orders to kill. You seem to like standing up for killers and murderers. Is Ivan Milat a good person too? Perhaps you think Hitler was a great Prophet too? After all he did put a book together called Mein Kampf. Don’t waste our time here Aaron. The only bigot here is someone with an uninformed view.”

Mr Adams, who identifies himself as an Australian of Assyrian Christian descent, told The Sun-Herald on Friday that he was not ”thinking politically” when he made the remarks.

“Rather than listen to what people say about the Koran I decided I would read it myself,” he said. “It was nothing political, it was out of pure emotion. I didn’t think it would be used against me and people would accuse me of being racist. What I did was a mistake, I did not think it would be used for political purposes. In my mind I was living in a free society where we value free speech. Why should religion be a taboo subject?”

But the Premier, Barry O’Farrell, did not agree. Late on Friday a government spokesman said in a statement: “The comments were totally inappropriate and the staff member has already been terminated.”

Sydney Morning Herald, 10 July 2011

Auckland: Muslim women in bid to lift veil of ignorance

Hijab in the West meetingMuslim women in New Zealand want to lift the “veil of ignorance” surrounding the way they dress. They say women who choose to cover their faces do so out of personal choice, with one comparing it to the veils worn by nuns.

About 60 women gathered at Auckland University on Friday night to discuss “Hijab in the West”, organised by the Young Muslim Women’s Association to discuss the Muslim headscarf and veil.

The women-only meeting was organised before it was revealed last week that a bus driver refused entry to a woman in a veil in May. The Saudi Arabian student was left crying on an Auckland street when the bus driver refused to let her board because of her veil. In another incident two days earlier, a driver for the same company, NZ Bus, told another woman to remove her veil.

Stuff, 10 July 2011

For an example of the ignorance Muslim women in New Zealand are up against see here.

Christian Right wants Los Angeles County sheriff sacked for links with CAIR

“Christian leaders in Southern California are calling on the L.A. County Board of Supervisors to fire Sheriff L.D. Baca for comments he made praising the Council on American Islamic Relations, a group with ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, both have been linked to terrorist activities.”

So begins a July 7th message from DefendChristians.org, a ministry of the Christian Anti-Defamation Commission, a group whose usual métier is claiming that President Obama is not a Christian.

DefendChristians.org offers a video as evidence of Sheriff Baca’s perfidy and further add:

“Many have United States citizens have fled to America after violence was directed at them for their Christian faith. Sheriff Baca’s praise for an organization with known ties to Islamic terrorism is outrageous and is an affront to all the victims of Islamic terror. This infiltration of law enforcement by those with sympathies for organizations that support Muslim violence is terrifying for Christians who have fled to the U.S. because of Muslim violence. Sheriff Baca must go!”

Examiner.com, 9 July 2011

EDL take to streets of Plymouth to protest against ‘the lies of Islam’

More than 400 officers took to the streets of Plymouth city centre to police two opposing marches – which numbered around about 300 people in total. Senior officers have defended the large deployment of officers, some of whom were drafted in from Avon and Somerset, Wiltshire and Gloucestershire forces, claiming it was necessary to “lessen the impact of the marches”.

While the far-right English Defence League (EDL) set off from the Wild Coyote public house in Exeter Street at 1pm on Saturday, a counter-rally, organised by unionists and the Unite Against Fascism group, set off from the Jigsaw Gardens in Cornwall Street. Both groups, which held around 100 to 150 marchers each, were accompanied on their separate routes through the city by a sizeable number of officers, some wearing protective gear and carrying riot helmets.

Labour councillors Chaz Singh (Drake) and Philippa Davey (Stoke) were joined by Plymouth Moor View MP Alison Seabeck at the Jigsaw gardens.

Ms Davey said: “We want to highlight the tactics of the EDL, where they claim they’re not racists and it’s only about extremist Muslims. We also want to show that despite their best attempts to show antifascist groups as anarchists, we are the peaceful ones and we will not rise to their intimidation.”

Mr Singh said: “We want to show that the true representation of diversity is here. We’re not here to exacerbate the problem, we’re here to show that we are the real people of Plymouth”.

One of the organisers of the EDL march – Hayley also known as Princess Angel – said their protest was to “wake people up to the lies of Islam”. She claimed a mosque was being build in Beaumont Road, Greenbank – which is described as an Islamic cultural centre by its owners the Plymouth Islamic Education Trust (Piety) – and that the “religion was full of hate and not peaceful at all.”

She said: “We’re not a racist organisation. We’re only against Muslim extremists. We’re not racists – we do have coloured members. There’s a non-white person here [today].”

Police said the day passed without major incident and only six arrests – a 28-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of possession of an offensive weapon at the Jigsaw gardens, a 45-year-old man on suspicion of breach of the peace in Notte Street and a 25-year-old man for assault occasioning actual bodily harm and possession of cannabis in Armada Way. Police say three more men were arrested during the marches for breach of the peace.

Police later charged the 28-year-old man and he is expected to appear before Plymouth magistrates on July 20 charged with possession of an offensive weapon. The remaining five arrested were later released on police bail.

Following the march, the EDL held speeches opposite the Holiday Inn by Citadel Road, while the opposing marchers carried out their shorter speeches close to the sundial in Armada Way. Both groups were then escorted back to the starting points by police.

This is Plymouth, 9 July 2011

‘Suspect Communities’ – Muslim and Irish experiences

On the sixth anniversary of the London bombings, Keith Vaz MP, chair of the Home Affairs select committee, hosted the launch of the report “Suspect communities”? Counterterrorism Policy, the Press, and the impact on Irish and Muslim Communities in Britain at the House of Commons yesterday.

The report examines to what extent and in what ways Irish communities and Muslim communities were represented as ‘suspect’ in public discourse in the two eras researched – the period of the Irish ‘Troubles’and post-9/11. It also examined the similarities and differences in the impact of these representations and counter-terrorism measures on Muslim communities and Irish communities in Britain.

ENGAGE, 8 July 2011

Former Czech PM sued over statements on Islam

POLITIKA - PRAHA - STRANA PRÁV OBÈANÙ - ZEMAN - TKRetired politician Milos Zeman, Czech prime minister in 1998-2002, faces a criminal complaint over the statements on Islam he made in June at an international conference on Europe.

“The enemy is the anti-civilisation spreading from North Africa to Indonesia. Two billion people live in it and it is financed partly from oil sales and partly from drug sales,” Czech news servers quoted Zeman as saying about Islam at the recent conference.

Zeman said Thursday Muslims believe in the Koran like Nazis believed in racial supremacy and anti-semitism and communists in class struggle and dictatorship of the proletariat.

He said Islam is far more aggressive and intolerant than present Christianity, Buddhism, Confucianism and other world religions.

He added that the Koran includes passages calling for the subjugation, enslavement and even elimination of non-believers.

ČTK, 8 July 2011

Counter-demonstration after EDL demo violence

Protesters are preparing to march against the English Defence League and Islamophobia following the beating of two Asian men during a far right demonstration.

The Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK (MPACUK) has called for a demonstration after the men were caught up in violence during an EDL protest against against plans to turn a disused butcher’s shop into an Islamic prayer centre in Green Lane, Dagenham, three weeks ago.

Tomorrow’s protest, which is also directed at the police response to the incident, is expected to leave the Becontree Heath Islamic Society in Green Lane, Dagenham, at 11.30am.

Protesters will then proceed to Chadwell Heath Police Station, where they will hand in a petition “from all the local residents to say that we want EDL off our streets and for an end to Islamophobia” according to the MPACUK Facebook page.

CI John Davison said: “It is the police’s duty to facilitate peaceful protest and I am confident that we can police this event in an appropriate and orderly manner.”

A police spokeswoman said: “The march/protest will be policed by one police inspector, three police sergeants and 18 police constables. Further police resources are available should they be required. However, at this time, police anticipate a peaceful protest. PS Gary Buttercase will be present to accept a petition from the demonstrators.”

London24, 8 July 2011

See also MPACUK press release, 6 July 2011

Local woman, rights group question hijab removal procedure of Dearborn police

Rachel ChinavareDEARBORN — A local Muslim woman along with a Council on American-Islamic Relations-Michigan spokesman have questioned the protocol of the city’s police department after the woman was forced to remove her headscarf in the presence of male officers during a “facial recognition” procedure.

Rachel Chinavare said she was made to sit in a waiting area in the station without her hijab and then was forced to walk into a room containing five male officers to retrieve it from a locker after her request to have it brought to her in a separate room was refused. Chinavare said she felt embarrassed and was denied her religious need for privacy and modesty in the presence of men.

Dearborn Police Chief Ron Haddad said that officers followed standard procedure during the night regarding the facial identification process. Chinavare was also not allowed to continue wearing her hijab while waiting because it is perceived by the department guidelines as a potential hazard for despondent people who have been arrested and may wish to hang themselves. Haddad said that belts, shoelaces and other items are also removed and put in lockers because of the policy.

But Chinavare said she was cooperative after her initial disbelief over being asked to remove the hijab and could not have been perceived as a threat to harm herself.

Dawud Walid of CAIR-MI said he was surprised to hear about Dearborn’s policies in treating Muslim women wearing a hijab and respecting their religious need for privacy among male officers.

“Headscarves are allowed for Muslim women in state correctional facilities as long as they are not high risk, and taking pictures while having a hijab on is good enough for the Michigan driver’s license and for the federal government to get a passport, so why can’t it be good enough for the city of Dearborn?”

Walid said that he would like to speak with the department about possibly instituting similar protocols to the Canton Police Department, which has begun using a policy that allows Muslim women to wear headscarves during the booking process which includes taking a picture. “That’s a model I would hope Dearborn Police would take up,” he said.

Arab American News, 8 July 2011