Israeli deputy minister meets German neo-Nazi millionaire

Patrik BrinkmannDeputy Minister Ayoob Kara met with Swedish-German millionaire Patrik Brinkmann who has ties with German neo-Nazi groups in Berlin over the weekend,Yedioth Ahronoth reported.

Brinkmann, who is trying to establish a far-right anti-Islamic party in Germany claims he is not an anti-Semite, however his previous close contacts with the German neo-Nazi party (NPD) and his past membership in another neo-Nazi party raise questions regarding his ideology.

Brinkmann, 44, made his fortune in the Swedish real estate business in the 1980s before becoming mixed in tax problems in his home country. As legal battles were going on he used the majority of his finances for the establishment of two research foundations which became closely affiliated with far-right and neo-Nazi elements in Germany.

The millionaire later began supporting the Pro NRW movement, Germany’s far-right and anti-Islamic party. He declared he fears that Sharia law will be introduced in the country and has pledged to establish a strong German right-wing party. He left the party last year in protest of its anti-Semitism, but resumed membership earlier this year. He now heads the party’s Berlin branch.

Brinkman visited Israel several months ago where he met Kara and announced his intention to promote one of his foundations in Israel. He met the deputy minister again in Berlin over the weekend as part of Kara’s private visit to the city’s World Culture Festival. Several months ago, Kara met with Austrian Freedom Party leader Heinz-Christian Strache who was once active in neo-Nazi groups.

Israel’s embassies in Berlin and Vienna have warned against such contacts. “Even if this is an alleged attempt to create an anti-Islamic European front, some of these elements seek to obtain an Israeli seal of approval without altering their anti-Semitic views,” an Israeli state official said.

The deputy minister said he was unaware of Brinkmann’s problematic connections with Germany’s neo-Nazi far-right movement, claiming this was “irrelevant.”

Ynetnews, 4 July 2011

See also Ayoob Kara’s meeting last month with Filip Dewinter of the Belgian far-right party Vlaams Belang.

Cambridge: support grows for ‘celebration of unity and diversity’ in opposition to EDL

Support has come from all quarters for a celebration of unity in defiance of a right wing march in Cambridge.

A host of councillors, community leaders, musicians and local people have thrown their weight behind a city centre march and “celebration of unity and diversity”, organised by Unite Against Fascism, in opposition to the English Defence League’s plans to make their presence felt on Saturday, July 9.

Richard Howitt MEP, members of Cambridge Muslim Council, local Trade Unionists, Kevin Courtney – deputy general secretary of the NUT – and members of Cambridge Fans United have all added their names to a statement entitled “We Are Cambridge”. Cambridge Ethnic Community Forum have also joined in.

A spokesman said: “We are proud of Cambridge’s history of welcoming those who have had to flee persecution and intolerance from around the world. The Cambridge Ethnic Community Forum is committed against all forms of prejudice, intolerance and hate.”

A public meeting will be held tonight (July 4) in the Unitarian Church Hall, Emmanuel Street, from 7.30pm featuring speakers such as Lewis Herbert, leader of the Labour group on Cambridge City Council, who plans to reveal a statement signed by Labour and Green councillors opposing the EDL and supporting the peaceful counter protest.

Also speaking will be Mirza Baig, vice chair of Cambridge Muslim Council. He recently told Unite Against Fascism members: “Thank you for raising your voice against messages of hate. You have our full support, and our committee will be participating in your demonstration.”

The counter march will take place on Saturday in Market Square from 11am.

Cambridge News, 4 July 2011

Lies and Andrew Gilligan: Who accused the East London Mosque of harbouring a child molestor?

Last month, in response to complaints about its coverage of the case of a former Hizb ut-Tahrir member convicted of sexually abusing young girls to whom he was giving religious instruction, theTelegraph published the following retraction on its website:

Our report “Extremist leader jailed for child abuse” (Jan 20) wrongly said that some of the victims of Ashraf Miah, described in a court report as a former teacher at the East London Mosque, were introduced via the Mosque. We are happy to confirm that the Mosque has no record of him ever having taught there and that there was no suggestion at trial of his victims having been introduced to him there.

The Telegraph‘s retraction referred to a report posted by Andrew Gilligan on his Telegraph blog (reproduced below), which stated:

The court heard that Miah also taught at the hardline East London Mosque, controlled by the Islamic Forum of Europe, which also believes in turning the UK into a sharia state, though by different methods. The mosque has hosted many hate, extremist and terrorist preachers, including Anwar al-Awlaki, the al-Qaeda spiritual leader. Some of the victims were introduced to Miah via the mosque.

This was the link to the offending report: http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/andrewgilligan/100072691/extremist-leader-jailed-for-child-abuse/

As you can see, the article has been deleted (either by Gilligan himself or by the administrators of the Telegraph website) and the link is now dead. But the report can still be found online, for example here.

You might think that Gilligan owed the East London Mosque an apology – after all, the accusation that the mosque harboured a child molestor who used its premises to target his victims was an extremely damaging one. But that would involve Gilligan admitting he got it wrong, and that would never do. So instead Gilligan has simply denied that he had any responsibility for publishing this false accusation. In a recent post on his Telegraph blog he wrote:

It is untrue to claim, as the mosque and its echoes in the blogosphere often do, including in its latest statement, that the Daily Telegraph has corrected any story I wrote about it: the correction was to a news-in-brief item (six months ago!) written by someone else. And if that 50-word piece, in all the tens of thousands of words we’ve written about the East London Mosque, is the only fault they’ve been able to find, I think we’re doing pretty well.

And in an earlier post on the East London Mosque, Gilligan had a go at yours truly over the same issue. After attacking my piece defending the mosque against charges of inciting homophobic violence, he added:

Bob’s passion for truth was also evident the other week, when he attacked me for an incorrect news-in-brief item about the mosque in the Telegraph which I did not write.

Now, it is true that the Telegraph did publish a news-in-brief piece on Ashraf Miah’s conviction in its print edition of 19 January (it is reproduced below). And the Telegraph also published a retraction of the inaccurate claims in that article:

Our report “Muslim extremist jailed for abusing girls at mosque” (Jan 19) wrongly said that Ashraf Miah, described in a court report as a former teacher at the East London Mosque, committed his offences on its premises. We are happy to confirm that he did not and that the Mosque has no record of him ever having taught there.

However, nobody has attributed this news-in-brief report to Gilligan. My own post reproduced the Telegraph‘s online statement regarding the false accusations against the East London Mosque in Gilligan’s blog article, from which I quoted. I didn’t refer at all to the short report in the print edition, still less claim that Gilligan had written it. In its response to the Telegraph‘s retractions the East London Mosque, too, clearly distinguished between the article on Gilligan’s blog and the news-in-brief report in the print edition, and made no claim that Gilligan was the author of the latter.

So what is Gilligan on about? The reality is that he did post a report on his Telegraph blog making false accusations against the East London Mosque. Having subsequently accepted that the accusations in that article were without basis, the Telegraph published a retraction and removed the article from its website. Now, in an attempt to deflect attention from this, Gilligan indignantly denies that he was the author of a different report in the Telegraph‘s print edition which nobody has in fact claimed he wrote.

Gilligan is very ready to accuse his critics of being liars, and you might be inclined to level the same charge against Gilligan himself. But that is possibly unfair. Liars are generally capable of recognising objective facts but choose to cover them up. Gilligan is perhaps better understood as a man living in a private fantasy world who is psychologically incapable of distinguishing between what’s true and what isn’t.


Muslim extremist jailed for abusing girls at mosque

Daily Telegraph print edition, 19 January 2011

A man has been jailed for a series of sex attacks on children while he was leader of a Muslim extremist group and a teacher at a hardline London mosque. Ashraf Miah, 38, from Mile End, repeatedly molested girls while they recited religious texts at the East London Mosque, Snaresbrook Crown Court heard. His victims were aged between five and seven. Miah, a senior member of the extremist group Hizb ut Tahrir, was jailed for three years and three months.


Extremist leader jailed for child abuse

Andrew Gilligan’s Telegraph blog, 20 January 2011

A man has been jailed for a series of sex attacks on committed while he was leader of a Muslim extremist group and a teacher at a hardline London mosque.

Ashraf Miah, 38, from Mile End, a former teacher at the East London Mosque, repeatedly molested the girls whilst they recited religious texts. The youngest victim was five and the oldest only seven.

Miah was at the time the East End leader of the notorious extremist group Hizb ut Tahrir, which believes that voting and democracy is forbidden in Islam and wants to turn Britain into a sharia state. He is listed as its contact for a number of events.

“He was a bit of a loner in the Hizb and did not have many friends, but he was a senior figure,” said one former member of the group.

During his trial, Miah claimed that the prosecution was a “conspiracy” against him because of his political views. Senior members of Hizb ut Tahrir gave evidence in Miah’s defence. However, the jury rejected his claims.

The assaults took place over a four-year period, from 2003 to 2007, during lessons at Miah’s flat and other houses in east London. Some of the girls complained to their parents about the abuse, but were not believed.

Snaresbrook Crown Court heard that the offences came to light after one of the girls’ fathers had a change of heart and reported her case to police. More victims were traced and Miah was convicted of a total of 13 sexual assaults against five different youngsters.

Sentencing him to three years and three months, Judge William Kennedy told Miah: “The children in this case came from three entirely separate and different families.

“Your suggestion at trial, and apparently still now, was and is that somehow the parents of those children have conspired to destroy your reputation. The suggestion that any parent would willingly encourage his or her daughter to lie about events in these circumstances was one which the jury considered and rejected.

“The possibility of coincidence of similar complaints by unconnected children is simply impossible.”

The court heard that Miah also taught at the hardline East London Mosque, controlled by the Islamic Forum of Europe, which also believes in turning the UK into a sharia state, though by different methods. The mosque has hosted many hate, extremist and terrorist preachers, including Anwar al-Awlaki, the al-Qaeda spiritual leader. Some of the victims were introduced to Miah via the mosque. The mosque said last night that it had “no record” of his working there.

The judge told Miah: “You were entrusted with these children as a religious teacher. As such you occupied a position of great importance and reputation. You repeatedly abused that trust.

“Right thinking people find it impossible to understand what gratification could possibly be achieved by the almost surreptitious touching of very small children. That the touching was sexual is beyond doubt.

“The offending was persistent, extending over a period of four years, and always involving children unlikely to be able to complain believably about what you were doing to them.

“Whatever may be the answer as to why you committed offences of this sort, the fact is that all decent people reserve a particular condemnation for those who abuse positions of trust to interfere with children.”

A Hizb ut Tahrir spokesman said last night that Miah had not been part of the group for two years and it was “satisfied that he did not use Hizb ut Tahrir for any criminal purpose.” The spokesman said that Hizb ut Tahrir members who testified for Miah “did so in a personal capacity.”

EDL harasses Muslim MEP and his family

Sajjad Karim (2)The British Muslim member of the European Parliament Sajjad Karim and his family have been placed under 24 hour police protection following a protest by the right wing English Defence League at his constituency residence in north west England.

According to the MEP of Pakistani heritage, around 50 EDL extremists turned up unannounced at his UK address on Saturday at just after midday, bearing anti-Islamic placards intent on violence.

“It was only through the presence of Lancashire Constabulary officers that harm was avoided,” he told media via a digital message. He went on to say that the extremists then carried on to his original hometown of Brierfield, Lancashire, where they carried out violent attacks and four arrests were made.

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Muslim woman thrown off bus in New Zealand for wearing veil

NZ BusA Saudi Arabian student was left crying on the street after a bus driver refused to let her board because of her Muslim veil.

The Consulate-General of Saudi Arabia has written to the Government to complain about the incident, and another, two days earlier, when a driver for the same company told another woman to remove her veil.

NZ Bus said both drivers had been sent on counselling programmes – and had been found to be suffering from “maskophobia”. “Both drivers … claim it’s not religious … but they genuinely have a phobia of people wearing masks, hence why we have not dismissed them,” general manager Jon Calder said yesterday.

Sameer Aljabri, the husband of one of the women, said he would lodge an official complaint with the Human Rights Commission on behalf of his wife, whom he would not name. She had been travelling with the couple’s one-year-old son in Auckland in May.

Dr Aljabri said the driver was opposed to her “full hijab” – a face veil with only the eyes exposed. The driver told her: “I do not want you on my bus but I have to serve you. Take off your face cover because I need to see your face.”

The letter from the Saudi consulate to the Foreign Affairs and Trade Ministry said that, two days later, student Gawheer Saud Al Thaubity was left crying on a street in Auckland. “As she stepped on to the crowded bus, the driver shouted, ‘Out!’ She asked why and was told, ‘Because you cover your face’. He insisted that she get off the bus, then closed the door and drove off.”

Stuff, 5 July 2011

Update:  See “NZ PM: Muslim veil no excuse for discrimination”,AFP, 5 July 2011

EDL leader is banned from protest activity

Stephen Lennon with police

The leader of the English Defence League has been banned from organising or taking part in any of the group’s protests as part of bail conditions.

Stephen Lennon, of Layham Drive, Luton, pleaded not guilty to a public order offence, which is alleged to have happened at an EDL rally in Luton town centre on May 26 against Euro MEP Richard Howitt.

At Luton Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday, the 26-year-old was granted conditional bail to reappear before magistrates on October 31 for a trial. As part of his conditions he must tell Luton police, within three days, if he is to move addresses.

He must also not knowingly organise, travel to, or participate in any march, demonstration, protest or similar within ten miles of Luton. In addition he must not send any article, letter, fax or email that seeks to promote or publicise any match, demonstration or protest in the open air within ten miles of Luton.

At a hearing at Blackburn Magistrates’ Court on June 24 in relation to an assault, he has been granted the same bail conditions, which also ban him from the above but which occur more than ten miles from the centre of Luton.

He was also ordered by Blackburn magistrates to report to Luton Police station every Saturday between midday and 2pm, but he was unable to do so yesterday as he was on holiday. If he breaks any of his bail conditions he can be imprisoned. He is due to stand trial at Preston Magistrates’ Court for the assault charge on September 29.

Luton on Sunday, 3 July 2011

Halifax: unity event called to oppose racist EDL, Saturday 9 July

Support is growing in Halifax for the antiracist unity event opposing the racists and fascists of the English Defence League on Saturday 9 July.

The EDL is coming to the West Yorkshire town on that date in its latest attempt to stir up racist hatred against Muslims in the area. The EDL’s planned demo in Halifax is part of a summer of hate.

Halifax Labour Party, the Central Jamia Mosque Madni, the Calderdale branch of the National Union of Teachers and the Calderdale and Kirklees branch of the PCS union have all thrown their weight behind the antiracist unity event organised by Halifax UAF.

Halifax MP Linda Riordan and Calder ward councillor Dave Young have also signed a statement backing the unity event and opposing the EDL’s attempts to organise in Halifax. NUT reps from across the area unanimously backed the antiracist statement at a meeting to discuss the pensions strike this week.

The unity event starts at 12 noon on Saturday 9 July, at People’s Park, King Cross Street, Halifax.

There have been a series of racist incidents involving EDL members around the town – earlier this month an EDL thug who theatened two elderly Asian men was given a suspended jail sentence. Other EDL members sang racist songs when the EDL staged a demo in Halifax in April.

Local antiracists are determined to show that the EDL thugs are not welcome in their town.

UAF news report, 2 July 2011

Australia: new law to force veiled women to uncover for police?

Women wearing the burqa or other full-face veils will be forced to show their face when stopped by police under proposed changes to the law, Attorney-General Greg Smith said yesterday. Mr Smith said there was a duty on all citizens to identify themselves when asked by police and the law should reflect that. “The law is not that specific at the moment and that is what we are leading towards,” Mr Smith said.

News.com, 2 July 2011

Geller’s ‘transatlantic anti-jihad summit conference’ is called off

“History will be made this July 2nd when Stop Islamization of America (SIOA) and Stop Islamization of Europe (SIOE) hold a joint demonstration and transatlantic anti-jihad summit conference in Strasbourg, France.”

Well, that’s how Pamela Geller advertised today’s planned event. She urged supporters: “Join us as leaders and freedom fighters come from all over the world to strategize on action plans to defeat Islamic Supremacism and preserve human rights and universal values of freedom.”

Alas, the struggle against the Muslim hordes has suffered a setback. Despite its world-historic significance, Geller’s summit has been cancelled. Richard Bartholomew has the details.

Tulsa federal judge rules against Abercrombie & Fitch in lawsuit over hijab

A Tulsa federal judge ruled Wednesday in favor of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in its lawsuit against Abercrombie & Fitch for not hiring a Muslim teenager who wore a religiously mandated headscarf.

U.S. District Judge Gregory Frizzell found that the company did not show that it would have sustained any significant “undue hardship” if it had accommodated the religious beliefs of Samantha Elauf, who in June 2008 applied to work in a sales position at the Abercrombie Kids store in Tulsa’s Woodland Hills Mall.

Frizzell’s decision means a jury will determine what, if any, damages should be awarded. The trial is tentatively scheduled to start July 18.

Tulsa World, 30 June 2011

Update:  See “Oklahoman gets $20,000 in lawsuit against retailer”, Associated Press, 21 July 2013