News Feed

rss.jpg

Search


Entries in State Oppression (803)

Sunday
Jun202010

Spying on British Muslims

This is an awful example of treating entire Muslim communities as suspicious and their democratic representatives as too unreliable to be trusted.

It stems from the same mentality that saw parts of the "Prevent" anti-extremism programme degenerate into police forces spying on Muslims' political and religious views.

It is no accident that this has happened in Birmingham. Last year an Institute of Race Relations report revealed that Prevent work in Birmingham was being directly managed by a counterterrorism police officer.

Anwar Akhtar on the installation of spy cameras in Muslim neighbourhoods in Birmingham.

Comment is Free, 20 June 2010

Saturday
Jun192010

Legal challenge to ban on Zakir Naik

An Indian Muslim preacher banned by the home secretary from entering the UK for his "unacceptable behaviour" is to challenge the ruling in the courts.

Zakir Naik, a 44-year-old television preacher, had been due to give lectures in Sheffield on 25 June and Wembley Arena the following day. Mr Naik is based in Mumbai, where he works for the Peace TV channel. The Islamic Research Foundation said in a statement:

"It is deeply regrettable the British Government has bowed to pressure from sectarian and Islamophobic pressure groups by preventing the entry of Dr Zakir Naik, who has been visiting and delivering talks in the United Kingdom for the past 15 years.

"Dr Zakir Naik is undoubtedly an opponent of terrorism and as such has often spoken out against all acts of violence and violent extremism. He has emphatically and unequivocally condemned the killing of civilians and is one of the world's regular noted orators on this topic.

"In the wake of the exclusion order and based on legal advice, Dr Zakir Naik intends to bring the matter before the High Court ... and request a judicial review to have the exclusion order overturned."

BBC News, 19 June 2010

Meanwhile, the English Defence League are celebrating having secured "another victory by getting hate preacher Zakir Naik banned from entering Britain". They have announced that they are calling off their Wembley demonstration on 26 June and holding it in Barking instead.

Friday
Jun182010

Theresa May bans Zakir Naik

A radical preacher who claimed that "every Muslim should be a terrorist" has been banned from coming to Britain, The Daily Telegraph can disclose. In her first major test of being tough on extremism, Theresa May, the new Home Secretary, said she was banning Zakir Naik from entering the UK.

Dr Naik, a 44-year-old Indian televangelist, had been due to give a series of lectures at arenas in Wembley Arena and Sheffield.

Last night Patrick Mercer MP, the former chairman of the Commons counter-terrorism committee, said: "This is really good news. It shows that firm Government action can be taken against people. This is exactly the sort of man who we want to exclude from this country."

Dr Naik has been named as the third most popular spiritual guru in India and was judged in 2009 to be 82nd in a list of India's most powerful people.

Daily Telegraph, 18 June 2010

See also Inayat's Corner, 17 June 2010

And ENGAGE, 18 June 2010

And "Zakir Naik exclusion order a serious error of judgement", MCB press release, 18 June 2010

Update:  See also "Mockery of freedom of expression", Islamic Research Foundation press release, 18 June 2010

Thursday
Jun172010

France criticised over discrimination against Muslims

Racial profiling and some politicians exploiting racial and xenophobic stereotypes persist in France despite progress in fighting discrimination, a Council of Europe report said Tuesday.

The European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) issued its fourth report on France with positive comments on the country's High Authority against Discrimination and for Equality (HALDE) for "its key and growing role in the fight against racism".

However, "while there had been improvements in certain areas, some issues gave rise for concern, such as minorities' perception of the police, prejudice against Muslims and the tone of the immigration debate," said Nils Muiznieks, chair of ECRI, the Council's independent human rights body.

Many racial acts go unreported and for those that are referred to authorities there is a low conviction rate, the report said. "The police frequently resort to racial profiling and take law enforcement decisions on the basis of racial, ethnic or religious stereotypes" rather than individual behaviour, it said.

In the political arena, the report noted that most politicians condemn openly racial comments and race-related acts, but that there are some who exploit the issue. In relation to immigration, "there is widespread suspicion that non-citizens engage in fraud to obtain residence permits and access to rights," the report said.

Regarding Muslims, part of French society doubts their willingness and ability to "respect French values". "The debate on the prohibition of the niqab (the face-covering veil) has increased feelings of discrimination among Muslims and may result in further excluding some Muslim women from society," the report said about the government's considering a ban on Muslim women wearing the full veil in public.

Problems of discrimination on the grounds of race, religion, nationality or ethnic origin persists in access to employment, education, housing, and goods and services, the report added.

Middle East Online, 16 June 2010

Thursday
Jun172010

Plastic bags placed over some spy cameras in Birmingham

Bags are to be put over scores of surveillance cameras in parts of Birmingham with large Muslim populations, after local objections.

Safer Birmingham Partnerships (SBP) said 216 cameras were put up including covert ones, mainly in the Washwood Heath and Sparkbrook districts. The cameras were financed through a counter-terrorism fund, but the SBP said they would tackle all crime.

Councillor Salma Yaqoob said people had lost faith in the authorities. The Respect Party councillor for Sparkbrook said: "In terms of reassurance it's going to take a lot more than plastic bags. The residents have lost faith with the authorities for their sneaky handling of the way they went about this and will not be reassured until they have been told the locations of the hidden cameras too."

SBP said 72 cameras had been placed covertly and would not be covered by the plastic bags. It said 106 cameras were Automatic Number Plate Recognition devices that were purely trained on car registration plates at road level. SBP said 38 overt CCTV cameras had been installed as well, but none of the cameras would be used until after the consultation had been carried out.

The cameras were financed through the Association of Chief Police Officers' (Acpo) Terrorism and Allied Matters (TAM).

BBC News, 17 June 2010

See also the Guardian, 17 June 2010

Update:  See Salma Yaqoob, "Police mislead public over spy cameras", Press release, 18 June 2010

Wednesday
Jun162010

Civil rights groups decry US Muslim's no-fly plight

U.S. civil liberties groups are protesting the case of a 26-year-old Muslim-American man who was placed on the no-fly list and barred from returning to the States after spending 18 months in Yemen.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Jun162010

Yasmin Qureshi calls on police to drop charges against anti-EDL demonstrators

Bolton's newest MP has accused Greater Manchester Police of heavy-handed tactics during March's English Defence League and Unite Against Fascism rallies. Now Yasmin Qureshi, who was elected as Bolton South East MP last month, is calling on GMP to drop charges against anti-fascist activists arrested on the day.

Ms Qureshi was on the UAF front line at the protest against the EDL's rally in Victoria Square on March 20 and is leading the new national campaign calling on police not to prosecute left-wing protesters.

The newly formed Justice4Bolton campaign is arguing the use of conspiracy laws, rather than charges relating to specific incidents which would require greater evidence, "indicates a move towards de-legitimatising protests against the rise of fascism in the UK".

Ms Qureshi said: "I did not see or hear any activity amongst the protesters that I would have described as violent disorder, though there were some police officers who, in my view, were being heavy-handed in some cases. I supported the aims of the protest against the English Defence League in Bolton and I was there."

Justice4Bolton has already won the support of trade unions, anti-fascist organisations and influential MPs including former Northern Ireland and Wales Secretary Peter Hain.

Thousands of UAF and EDL demonstrators held counter-demonstrations in Victoria Square on March 20. Police made more than 70 arrests, with more than 50 of those UAF supporters. Among those arrested on the day were Weyman Bennett, joint secretary of Unite Against Fascism, and Rhetta Moran, joint secretary of Greater Manchester UAF.

Mr Hain said: "The UAF has worked very hard to get rid of the British National Party and the fascist threat and should be congratulated, not prosecuted."

Bolton News, 16 June 2010

Update:  Cf. "Police deny claims of EDL support", Bolton News, 17 June 2010

Tuesday
Jun152010

Spanish government announces plans to ban veil

Spain's government plans to ban the use of the Islamic burqa in public places under a proposed new law on religious freedom, the justice minister said Tuesday.

"We believe that there are things like the burqa which are hard to reconcile with human dignity and which especially pose problems of identification in public places," Francisco Caamano told reporters. The new law "will have to include measures on these symbols which impede identification in public places" for reasons of "security", Caamano said.

His remarks came a day after the mayor of Barcelona, Jordi Hereu, announced it would be the first large city in Spain to ban the use of the full-face Islamic veil in public buildings.

Two other towns in the northeastern region of Catalonia, Lerida and El Venrell, have recently imposed bans on the use of the Islamic veil in public buildings. Two more, Tarragona and Gerona, are considering similar measures, as is Coin in the southern region of Andalucia.

AFP, 15 June 2010

Tuesday
Jun152010

Stop these exclusion orders against Muslim preachers

Sources tell me that the Home Office is currently considering issuing two exclusion orders. One would be against a Jamaican-born Muslim preacher called Abu Ameenah Bilal Philips and the other against Zakir Naik, who is due to arrive in the UK on Friday to begin a speaking tour to huge audiences at the Sheffield Arena, London's Wembley Arena and the LG Arena in Birmingham's NEC. Naik is based in Mumbai, India and has in recent years built up a huge international following among Muslims. His lectures and debates on the topic of comparative religion are played continuously on Peace TV – the satellite channel that he founded.

This is just the latest in a series of "naming and shaming" exclusion orders that began a couple of years ago when the former Labour government said that it would introduce a policy of banning "preachers of hate" from visiting the UK. At the end of last month the Sunday Times ran an article about Zakir Naik that seems to have panicked some people in the government. For his part Naik has since issued a press statement saying that he "unequivocally condemns acts of violence including 9/11, 7/7 and 7/11 [the serial train bombing in Mumbai], which are completely and absolutely unjustifiable on any basis."

We already have a sufficient number of laws on the statute books to deal with incitement to hatred and violence, and the fact is that both Bilal Philips and Zakir Naik have visited the UK on several occasions in the past – and their speaking tours have passed by without incident. Neither speaker has said anything that has got them in trouble with the law, so why not just uphold our existing laws rather than seek to pre-emptively ban them? It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the exclusion order policy is yet another government PR gimmick designed to show that it is getting tough on those it regards as being extremists.

Inayat Bunglawala at Comment is Free, 15 June 2010

Monday
Jun142010

Barcelona to ban veil in municipal buildings

Barcelona is to become the first major Spanish city to bar the use of face-covering Islamic veils in municipal buildings.

City Mayor Jordi Hereu announced the measure Monday but insisted it was not specifically religious. He says it is aimed at all dress that impedes identification, and thus includes motorcycle helmets and ski masks.

Lleida, also in the Spanish region of Catalonia, last month became the first Spanish city to regulate use of body-covering burqas or face-covering niqab garments.

Barcelona town hall said the measure was largely symbolic given that it is unusual to see women wearing burqas or niqabs in the city, which has a population of 1.5 million.

Associated Press, 14 June 2010

See also Reuters, which reports that a Partido Popular councillor has complained that the ban does not go far enough: "The mayoral decree is a half-measure, because as well as forbidding the burqa and niqab in public installations, it is necessary to forbid it on the street."

Page 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 ... 81 Next 10 Entries »