Sarah Posner investigates the “shari’ah conspiracy theory industry”.
Why just quitting the Daily Star wasn’t enough
Hugh Muir interviews Richard Peppiatt, the journalist who resigned from the Daily Star in protest at its anti-Muslim reporting.
See also “Ex-Daily Star reporter ‘gets hate messages'”, Guardian, 9 March 2011
Ken Livingstone defends Muslim hate cleric Qaradawi
Well, that’s the headline in the Pink Paper.
Meanwhile, over at his Torygraph blog Andrew Gilligan has resumed his lying about Qaradawi, once again accusing him of defending rape and the targeting of non-combatants by Palestinian suicide bombers. These two accusations have already been demolished here. Gilligan also cites Qaradawi’s 1960 book The Lawful and Prohibited in Islam as evidence that Qaradawi advocates wife-beating and has “called for gay people to be killed”. Those charges are refuted here.
One of Gilligan’s claims is, however, true. Qaradawi does regard homosexuality as a sin. As indeed do the Pope and the Chief Rabbi, among others. There is of course an ultra-secularist minority who adopt the consistent if misguided position that all faith leaders who hold the view that homosexuality is immoral should be boycotted. But somehow I doubt Gilligan is one of them.
EDL leader Guramit Singh will not be charged with religiously aggravated harassment
One of the leaders of the English Defence League (EDL) will face no further police action after being arrested following their controversial march in Peterborough.
Guramit Singh (28), from Nottingham, was arrested on December 21 on suspicion of causing religiously aggravated harassment, alarm or distress.
The arrest came after a member of the public complained about the content of Mr Singh’s speech delivered outside Peterborough Magistrates’ Court during the EDL protest on December 11. Mr Singh’s speech was heard by around 1,000 EDL supporters, who took part in the protest, as well as hundreds of shoppers.
A spokesman for Cambridgeshire Police said: “Following a detailed police investigation and advice from the Crown Prosecution Service, he has been released with no further action.”
Mr Singh was not available for comment but fellow EDL leader Tommy Robinson said: “We are pleased the charges were dropped – there was nothing in them.”
Peterborough Evening Telegraph, 8 March 2011
The content of Singh’s Peterborough speech can be sampled here.
So, while Emdadur Choudhury, an idiot follower of Anjem Choudary, can be prosecuted and fined under the Public Order Act for burning poppies on Remembrance Day, it appears that a leader of the racist EDL can engage in foul-mouthed abuse of British Muslims without any legal sanction at all.
ENGAGE has commented on the double standards of the right-wing press who expressed outrage that Emdadur Choudhury was fined a mere £50. Can we now perhaps expect those same newspapers to condemn the failure of the police and CPS to take action against Guramit Singh?
Manufacturing the Muslim menace: how US counter-terrorism training ‘presents Islam as inherently violent’
The US government is being accused of pumping millions of dollars into unregulated training schemes for local police officers and other law enforcers that give a distorted, dangerous and inflammatory picture of the Muslim faith.
Political Research Associates, a Massachusetts-based progressive thinktank, spent nine months investigating the burgeoning industry of counter-terrorism training. It concluded that in seminars and conferences across America, police, transit and other law-enforcement officers were being given an ideologically skewed impression of Islam that impugned the entire religion, presenting it as inherently violent and sympathetic to terrorism.
One training conference, which PRA investigators attended, was held last October by the International Counter-Terrorism Officers Association, a body formed by New York police officers in the wake of 9/11. The conference was addressed by Walid Shoebat, a speaker used by several of the private training outfits.
Shoebat is a convert to Christianity, having formerly been a Muslim with links to the Palestinian Liberation Organisation. In his presentation, called The Jihad Mindset and How to Defeat It: Why We Want to Kill You, he accused Muslim men of raping women, children and young boys. “They are paedophiles!” he shouted.
According to the report, Shoebat went on: “The Muslim beheads with a smile. You can see it on YouTube, on TV; the Afghan child trained to execute Christians. You say that Islam is a peaceful religion? Why? It hates the west.” He also said: “Islam is a revolution and is intent to destroy all other systems. They want to expand, like Nazism.”
See also Tarso Ramos, “The anti-Muslim fearmongering we can’t see”, Comment is Free, 9 March 2011
Read the Political Research Associates report Manufacturing the Muslim Menace here
Update: See also Bartholomew’s Notes on Religion, 11 March 2011
Muslims, Jews warn Europe: Mainstreaming of far-right parties is unacceptable
Prominent Muslim and Jewish leaders from across Europe gathered in Paris have pledged to stand together against the rise of far-right xenophobic and racist parties that represent an escalating peril to ethnic and religious minorities across Europe, including Jews and Muslims. Members of the Coordinating Committee of European Muslim and Jewish Leaders, including top communal leaders from Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland and the US, announced plans for a series of public events in European capitals, on 9 May (Europe Day). The leaders expressed deep concern about the emergence into the political mainstream of extremist parties in many European countries and declared that it was “totally unacceptable” that several of these parties had been accepted by governing coalitions as tacit partners where they are allowed to help shape the agenda.
Contending that “Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and racism must never be allowed to become respectable,” the leaders expressed disquiet over recent pronouncements by European statesmen including President Sarkozy of France, Chancellor Merkel of Germany and Prime Minister Cameron of Britain, characterizing multiculturalism as a failure; comments that have been cited by far-right parties as evidence that they are winning the battle for public opinion in Europe. Promising to press European decision-makers not to co-operate in any way with extremist parties, the Jewish and Muslim leaders vowed: “We will not allow ourselves to be separated, but will stand together to fight bigotry against Muslims, Jews and other minorities. An attack on any of us is an attack on all of us.” Citing studies which show that anti-Semitism and Islamophobia are both growing rapidly in countries across Europe, the communal leaders affirmed that “Jews and Muslims are equal stakeholders in Europe, not expendable guests, and must therefore enjoy the same rights as everybody else. Appeasing those that sow the seeds of hatred and division is not only morally wrong, but will have disastrous consequences for Europe if allowed to continue.”
The first meeting of the Coordinating Committee was initiated by the New York-based Foundation for Ethnic Understanding (FFEU), the World Council for Muslim Inter-Faith Relations (WCMIR), and the World Jewish Congress (WJC), and is a follow up to the first annual Gathering of European Muslim and Jewish leaders, which was launched in Brussels last December – see www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/events/10. At the time, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy received the group and endorsed its aims.
WCMIR’s European chair, British Imam Abduljalil Sajid, declared: “Islamophobia and anti-Semitism represent the sharp end of racism in Europe, so Jews and Muslims must fight them together, and prevent anyone from turning us into scapegoats. At the same time, Europeans of all backgrounds should come together to defend basic European and universal values of democracy, pluralism and mutual acceptance.”
FFEU President and WJC Vice President Rabbi Marc Schneier, who successfully initiated similar activities between Muslims and Jews in America together with the Islamic Society of North America, declared: “Although much of the venom of extremist and populist parties is directed these days against Muslims, it should not be forgotten that several of the far-right parties, including the National Front in France, have histories replete with anti-Semitism. On 9 May, we will gather in Paris and elsewhere to say that the rise of such parties across Europe is menacing to both of our communities, as well as to basic democratic values of pluralism and tolerance. If Europe wants to remain true to its ethical and spiritual foundations, it must embrace people from different cultures, religions and ways of life. If not, it will not only fail as a concept, it will lose its soul.”
Defend multiculturalism – No to Islamophobia
California: Sikhs may have been shot because they were mistaken for Muslims
WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The daily stroll had become routine for two elderly Sikh men in a Sacramento suburb, as well as for neighbors and friends accustomed to seeing the men walk by with their long beards and turbans.
But the traditional headwear might have singled them out late last week when they were gunned down, one fatally, in what police are investigating as a suspected hate crime. On Monday, local religious leaders pleaded for the community to come forward with leads but also said they will not be deterred by violence.
“Our community will continue to wear our turbans proudly,” said Navi Kaur (NA’vee Kar), the granddaughter of Surinder Singh, 65, who died from his wounds. His friend, 78-year-old Gurmej Atwal, remains in critical condition.
They were walking through their neighborhood in Elk Grove, just south of the capital, Friday afternoon when someone in what witnesses described as a pickup truck opened fire. Police said they have no suspects nor any indication the shooting was a hate crime, but said the turbans could have made the elderly men a target of extremists.
During a news conference Monday at a Sikh temple, a spokesman said the recent violence has scared some temple-goers into concealing any indicators of their religion.
Sikhs often are mistaken for Muslims and have been the subject of occasional violence across the country since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Sikhs draw particular attention because of their traditional beards and turbans, which are mistakenly associated with Islamic terrorists.
Drawing US crowds with anti-Islam message
The New York Times profiles Brigitte Gabriel of ACT! for America.
See also “Radical Islamophobe activist advising Rep. Peter King explains his ‘Muslim messenger’ strategy”, Think Progress, 8 March 2011
And “Rep. King asked to clarify support from anti-Islam hate group”, CAIR press release, 8 March 2011
Filmmaker beaten because his name is Usama
FAIRFIELD, Iowa — An independent filmmaker says he was beaten up after crashing a party in a small Iowa town and telling people his name is Usama.
Usama Alshaibi told the Chicago Tribune partygoers in Fairfield, Iowa, punched him in the head early Sunday and knocked him to the floor.
He quickly realized why he had been attacked when his assailants started calling him Osama bin Laden and making anti-Arab comments.
“I was pretty scared, and I felt like I had gotten myself in a bad situation,” Alshaibi said.
Alshaibi, who grew up in Iowa City and recently moved to Fairfield with his wife, also lived in Chicago for 16 years. He said that in Iowa City party-hopping is a common practice and he assumed he would be welcomed when a woman standing outside the house invited him in as he walked home.
“If they felt like I shouldn’t have been there, they could have called the cops. I wasn’t out to hurt anyone,” he said. “I wasn’t trying to do anything but hang out with people.”
Fairfield Police Chief Julie Harvey said Monday the attack was being treated as a hate crime. But she said police had been unable to find the house where the party took place.
Alshaibi is best known for the documentary “Nice Bombs” about a trip back to Iraq with his family a year after the U.S. invasion.