‘We must stop appeasing Islamist extremism’ says Ed Husain

“We can expect Luton-style protests and worse in the years to come unless the Government gets a grip on Islamism, says Ed Husain.”

Sunday Telegraph, 15 March 2009

What Ed really means, of course, is that the government should stop working with organisations that represent real forces in the Muslim communities, and instead restrict their links to stooge groups like Ed’s own Quilliam Foundation, which represents virtually nothing and is regarded with general contempt.

Meanwhile, over at the Observer, Ed and his self-serving prescriptions for combating extremism are treated to a puff piece by liberal warmonger Nick Cohen, who has never forgiven mainstream Muslim organisations for mobilising opposition to the invasion of Iraq.

Cohen directs his attack on the East London Mosque. This has a mass base in the local Muslim community, for whom it provides a vital resource, with a library, conference rooms, classrooms, a gym and space for 10,000 worshippers, but Cohen says the governent should have nothing to do with anyone associated with it.

He claims this is because of the mosque’s links to the Bangladeshi political party Jamaat-e-Islami, though some of us might suspect that Cohen’s hostility is not unconnected with the fact that the East London Mosque played a crucial role in organising support for the mass demonstration against the Iraq war in February 2003.

Headscarves: the wrong battle

Throughout Europe, over the past decade, there has been a loud – and at times openly xenophobic – debate about whether a Muslim woman should be allowed to wear a headscarf while on duty in a government job. Various types of bans have been enacted in several countries, including France, Germany, and Turkey.

Some feminists seek these bans in the name of helping Muslim women, whom they often see as uniformly oppressed. Anti-immigration politicians seek these policies because they see people who refuse to “fit in” as a threat to western society. But these arguments are detrimental both to women’s rights and to peaceful integration, and the women most likely to be affected are rarely consulted.

“I suddenly felt like a stranger in Germany,” one elementary school teacher said, describing her reaction to a ban in her state. “I will never forget that.”

She was one of many people interviewed by Human Rights Watch in Germany, where 8 of 16 federal states have these bans for teachers (in two states the ban also covers other civil servants). Some of these laws are openly discriminatory, banning religious symbols, but excluding symbols of “Christian heritage.” Other German bans appear to be neutral, but almost exclusively affect Muslim women.

Gauri van Gulik at Comment is Free, 14 March 2009

Charles Moore explains Islamism

“There is a strong strand in the current state of Islam which sees the religion as a political project. This creed, often called ‘Islamism’, holds that no society is legitimate unless it imposes sharia – the law of God. There is no doctrine of tolerance, and a complete rejection of secular or Christian rule.”

Daily Telegraph, 14 March 2009

Which only goes to show that, when it comes to Islam, you can write whatever ignorant nonsense you like and still get it published in the right-wing press.

See also ENGAGE, 13 March 2009

Boris capitulates to Evening Standard witch-hunt of Azad Ali (now there’s a surprise)

Boris+Johnson+yawningBoris Johnson today said he would cut funding to a Muslim advisory body that works with the police following a row over its links with a controversial blogger.

The London mayor’s pledge to halt money to the Muslim Safety Forum came after the Evening Standard yesterday revealed the organisation had received City Hall funding worth £30,000 under his watch, despite the fact that one of its founding members is Azad Ali.

Earlier this year, Ali made headlines when he was suspended from his civil service job at the Treasury over a blog attack on the government’s policy towards “the Zionist terrorist state of Israel”.

Johnson – who as London mayor has a duty to promote good community relations in the capital – said further funding to the MSF would be discontinued.

The organisation was set up following 9/11 and works closely with the Metropolitan police and other forces across the country on improving community relations.

“The mayor is very concerned to discover that taxpayers’ money has gone to this organisation,” Johnson’s office said. “The commitment was made by the previous mayor and the agreement was in place before the election. The mayor has ensured that no further payments will be made when the outstanding agreement is concluded.”

Guardian, 13 March 2009


Great work there, Boris. You’ve removed funding from an organisation that played a significant role in promoting good community relations in London. Still, that’s a small price to pay for retaining the political support of the Evening Standard, isn’t it?

Ibrahim Moussawi to be admitted to UK – a victory for common sense over Hazel Blears

The government is poised to allow Ibrahim Moussawi, media relations officer of Hizbollah, into the UK – despite the opposition of the cabinet minister responsible for social cohesion.

The JC has learned that the Communities Secretary, Hazel Blears, is fighting a lone battle within Whitehall to prevent Mr Moussawi’s admission to speak at a conference at London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies on March 23.

No other Cabinet minister has, the JC understands, sided with Ms Blears, and the Hizbollah propagandist is to be granted a visa.

Jewish Chronicle, 12 March 2009

Continue reading

Witch-hunt of Azad Ali continues, courtesy of Andrew Gilligan

Andrew Gilligan 2Mayor Boris Johnson has given at least £30,000 of taxpayers’ money to an organisation co-controlled by an Islamist “extremist”, the Standard can reveal.

Azad Ali praises a spiritual leader of al Qaeda on his blog, denies the Mumbai attacks were “terrorism” and quotes, apparently approvingly, a statement advocating the killing of British troops in Iraq. He also criticises those Muslims who “tell people that Islam is a religion of peace”. He describes non-Muslims as “sinners” and says Muslims should “hate [non-Muslims’] disbelieving actions”.

Mr Ali is the founding chairman, and current treasurer, of the Muslim Safety Forum, a group that has received at least £30,000 from City Hall since Mr Johnson’s election last May. He is also one of the Forum’s two directors and its nominated contact for the Charity Commission.

The Forum’s website says it was set up to challenge the “unfair focus on the Muslim community when it came to policing activities and enforcement of anti-terror policing legislation”. It holds regular meetings with the police.

Mr Ali was suspended from his job as a civil servant in January after some of his views came to the attention of his employers.

However, City Hall payment lists seen by the Standard show that in the same month, his organisation received the latest of its £10,000 quarterly payments from the GLA. It also received £10,000 in July and October last year, as well as at least £70,000 under the previous Mayor, Ken Livingstone. Its annual general meeting, in July, was addressed by Mr Johnson’s deputy mayor, Richard Barnes.

Evening Standard, 12 March 2009


Gilligan also refers to an exchange between Azad Ali and “Sid”, a blogger who posts at Pickled Politics, where he acts as Little Mr Echo to the demented David Toube of Harry’s Place.

Sid (as usual, taking his line from a piece by Toube) has a post on Gilligan’s article at Pickled Politics today, where he summarises Azad Ali’s position as follows: “After all, Britain is of the Dar al Harb (‘Land of War’) which is why here, anything goes.”

In fact, if you read what Azad Ali actually wrote at Between the Lines, the Islamic Forum of Europe blog, you’ll find that he was arguing precisely the opposite. His point was that violent resistance is legitimate only in Muslim countries that are under foreign occupation, not elsewhere.

He quoted a statement by Abdullah Azzam’s wife that her husband “was against attacks outside the battlefield. The enemy had to be clear and known and you didn’t leave the battlefield to attack elsewhere”. He also quoted Abdullah Azzam’s son saying that his father “always warned people to stay away from the extremists, he even put it in his will. What is happening today with Al-Qaeda is not his way.”

In another post, replying to a series of ranting attacks on him by Toube at Harry’s Place, Azad Ali repeated the latter point: “The fact that Abdullah Azzam rejected Osama and his ideas seems to have completely escaped David T’s mind.”

And Andrew Gilligan’s mind too. When Gilligan writes that “Mr Ali wrote in praise of Abdullah Azzam, Osama bin Laden’s key mentor”, in order to suggest to the reader that Azad Ali is a supporter of Al Qaida, he too is attributing to Azad a view that is the exact opposite of the one he actually holds.

Gilligan at least has the sense to use weasel words that avoid making an explicit accusation against Azad Ali. Writing in today’s Daily Mail, however, Richard Littlejohn has no hesitation in describing Azad as “a prominent al Qaeda cheerleader” – providing excellent grounds for legal action against the Daily Mail, I would say. Hopefully, Azad Ali is on the phone to Carter-Ruck even as we speak.

Gilligan also misrepresents Azad Ali’s position on the Mumbai massacre, implying that he refused to issue an outright condemnation of this atrocity. What Azad in fact objected to was Melanie Phillips’ piece on Mumbai which attempted to identify terrorism with Islamism. His objections were understandable – since, as we have seen, Azad Ali embraces a form of Islamism that rejects terrorism.

He quoted Phillips as writing: “The Islamists want to murder as many Americans, Brits, Hindus and Jews as possible. That is because they are waging all-out war against civilisation.” Azad commented: “Job done for Mel, from ‘terrorists’ or more precisely the criminals that committed the atrocities we have now moved quite far along the ‘conveyor belt’ and we can now comfortably blame the ‘Islamists’!”

In the subsequent discussion with “Sid”, Azad Ali repeatedly made this point: “Mad Mel is wrong to use the word Islamist to describe these people, as she uses the same word to describe those that are non violent or commit acts of murder. She is deliberately conflating the two with this term….”

Sid’s refusal to accept this point stemmed from the fact that he shares Mad Mel’s aim of misrepresenting all Islamists as extremists and potential terrorists. In Phillips’ case this is motivated by her right-wing Zionist politics. In Sid’s case it arises from the fact that he is an opponent of the Bangladeshi political party Jamaat-e-Islami, with which the Islamic Forum of Europe is associated.

Rather than address the actual role that JI-associated activists play in Britain, and particularly London’s East End, in countering the appeal of terrorist groupuscules or of sectarian movements like Hizb ut-Tahrir, Phillips and Sid want to distort the situation in pursuit of their own positions on the politics of Israel or Bangladesh.

The fact that this leads to witch-hunts against individuals, undermines mainstream Muslim organisations that are combating terrorism and assists in the demonisation of the entire Muslim community is something they’re both evidently happy to live with.

Scots equality fund favours Muslims, claims Christian Institute

Islamic organisations receive more public funding for ‘equality’ than all other religious groups put together in Scotland, it has been revealed. Almost 60 per cent of all grants given out by the Equality Unit has gone to just five Muslim groups.

The groups were awarded £1.5 million of public money, dwarfing the £137,500 given to Christian charities and the £110,000 given to Jewish organisations. Muslims make up less than one per cent of Scotland’s population but two thirds identify themselves as Christians.

A Labour backbencher George Foulkes said: “I’ve had representatives raise this and they are deeply concerned at the imbalance in the grant allocation.” He warns: “They say not only is it unfair but it’s dangerous.”

Murdo Fraser, the Tory deputy leader stated there was nothing wrong with giving grants to different religious groups but underlined that it had to be “proportionate”. Mr Fraser said: “It would be legitimate to ask why the Government is so focussed on giving such large sums to Muslim groups at the expense of other faiths”.

A representative for the Muslim Council of Scotland accused Mr Foulkes of stirring up trouble between faiths.

A spokesman for First Minister Alex Salmond pointed out that the figures do not include funding from other areas which contribute to charities such as faith schools and aid organisations.

Christian Institute news release, 11 March 2009

The Britsh National Party seizes on this latest example of “the Islamification of Britain”:

“The ‘Equality Unit’ is part of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, and runs a series of programmes from its Edinburgh offices including special units devoted to the rights of ‘gypsies, travellers, transgender equality, faith and race equality, and refugees and asylum seekers’. The British National Party has vowed to dismantle the network of anti-white and anti-British organisations which exist only to further discriminate against the indigenous population of this country.”