‘Just because you pray, you are not a terrorist’ Swedish Muslim tells police

Police in Norrköping came out in force Wednesday afternoon after they had been tipped off about a “mysterious foreign man” behaving strangely at a bus stop, and then getting on the bus with his rucksack.

It turns out the 28-year-old man had carried out the muslim praying ritual at the bus stop, but when police caught up with him, and searched him, all suspicions were dismissed.

The local police told news agency TT that this is not the first time they got reports of people with foreign looks behaving in what is seen as “suspiciously”. They claim the number of reports have increased after the failed suicide attack among Christmas shoppers at Drottninggatan in Stockholm. “the atmosphere is very agitated,” says officer Torbjörn Lindqvist at the police in Östergötland.

Also Moustafa Kharraki, deputy head of the Swedish Muslim Council, has noticed more suspicion of muslims lately. “This is very serious and it concerns pure discrimination. People have become fearful and suspicious, a lot has changed since Drottninggatan,” Kharraki told the news agency TT.

Kharraki finds the actions of the Norrköping police “unacceptable”. “The police needs more knowledge. Any muslim can pray in a public space. It is completely normal and just because you pray, you are not a terrorist.”

Radio Sweden, 12 January 2011

Via Islam in Europe

Man charged with attacking Leicester mosque

A 30-year-old man has been charged with religiously-aggravated criminal damage to a Leicester mosque. He is also accused of a racially-aggravated common assault, and theft of flowers worth £75 belonging to the mosque.

All the offences are alleged to have taken place at the mosque in Churchill Street, Highfields, Leicester, on September 11, 2010. The man is due to appear at Leicester Magistrates’ Court on February 11.

Leicester Constabulary news report, 11 January 2011

Via ENGAGE

Fascists hold another protest against Bletchley mosque

BNP protest against Bletchley mosqueThe British National Party reports on their latest demonstration in Bletchley against the proposed conversion of a disused former biker bar into a mosque and community hall.

They claim 150 supporters participated in the protest (no doubt an exaggeration) but apparently less than half of them followed the BNP’s Milton Keynes organiser Kieren Trent to a meeting in a local pub to hear a speech from Buckinghamshire sub-regional organiser Matt Tait.

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Luton Council asks home secretary to ban EDL march

Luton Borough Council has written to the home secretary asking her to ban a proposed march by the English Defence League (EDL) in the town next month. In a statement the council said there was a real risk of disorder. “We recognise that a banning order on the EDL and counter demonstrators would not prohibit them from holding a static demonstration,” the statement said. “However a march is, in our opinion, provocative and not conducive to the public good at this time and would risk serious disorder.”

The council said that any march proposed by the EDL would need to travel through residential areas from the railway station and other access points into the town. “The presence of high numbers of demonstrators supporting rival and diametrically opposing views is not conducive to the wellbeing of our community and has the potential to spark tensions and community impacts which as a council we have worked so hard to avoid in recent years,” the statement went on to say.

BBC News, 10 January 2011

Another arson attack on a Berlin mosque

Police in Berlin are investigating an arson attack on a mosque in the capital city after a man walking past saw flames at the entrance in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Detectives said on Saturday there was a message left at the site of the attack at the Ahmadiyya community in the Wilmersdorf district of Berlin, but did not reveal what it said.

Someone had set the entrance to the mosque on fire, but the passer-by noticed the flames at around 1:45 am on Saturday, and started putting out the blaze himself. When police officers arrived, they finished off the job with a fire extinguisher from their vehicle.

Criminal detectives are now on the case, trying to determine whether there is a link between this attack and arson attacks on other mosques during 2010.

The last six months of last year saw six such attacks – the Shitlik mosque on Columbiadamm was attacked in June, twice in August and again in November, while the Neukölln Al-Nur mosque was attacked in November and an Islamic cultural centre in Tempelhof was targeted in December.

No-one was hurt in any of the attacks, but damage was done in every case.

The Local, 8 January 2011

The myth of Muslim grooming

The British National party’s website, its logo still sporting a seasonal sprig of holly, is understandably triumphalist as it proclaims that the “controlled media” has admitted this week that “Nick Griffin has been right all along about Muslim paedophile gangs”.

The particular branch of the controlled media the BNP refers to is the Times, which has been running the results of a lengthy investigation into the sexual exploitation and internal trafficking of girls in the north of England. Specifically, the Times has marshalled evidence suggesting that these organised crimes are carried out almost exclusively by gangs of Pakistani Muslim origin who target white youngsters; and it quotes both police and agency sources who refer to a “conspiracy of silence” around the open investigation of such cases, amid fears of being branded racist or inflaming ethnic tensions in already precarious local environments.

This is not the first time that anxieties about the ethnic dimension of child sexual exploitation have been aired by the media. In 2004 the Channel 4 documentary Edge of the City, which explored claims that Asian men in Bradford were grooming white girls as young as 11, sexually abusing them and passing them on to their friends, was initially withdrawn from the schedules after the BNP described it as “a party political broadcast”, and the chief constable of West Yorkshire police warned that it could spark disorder.

Anecdotally, as far back as the mid-90s, local agencies have been aware of the participation of ethnic minority men in some cases of serial abuse. But what has not emerged is any consistent evidence to suggest that Pakistani Muslim men are uniquely and disproportionately involved in these crimes, nor that they are preying on white girls because they believe them to be legitimate sexual quarry, as is now being suggested.

Libby Brooks in the Guardian, 7 January 2011

See also ENGAGE, 7 January 2011