ISLAMOPHOBIA: Anti Muslim Racism

Entries in Far Right Racists (497)

'Dispatches' to provide platform for BNP's anti-Muslim bigotry

bnp-islam-poster.gifOne of Epping's BNP councillors is set to feature on a controversial television documentary which attracts millions of viewers. Councillor Pat Richardson will speak candidly about her attitude towards Muslims living in Britain on the Dispatches programme scheduled to be screened on Channel 4 in July.

Mrs Richardson, who has the rare distinction of being the BNP's only Jewish councillor, was interviewed for the programme during the local election count at Waltham Abbey Town Hall earlier this month, where she was elected to represent the Loughton Broadway ward.

Along with fellow BNP party members, she was questioned about her views on British Muslims by the show's producer James Jones. Mrs Richardson said: "He was very polite and he followed us around throughout the morning." Mr Jones said: "I chose to interview Pat Richardson as a subject because her background and political views make her an interesting subject."

Epping Forest Guardian, 13 May 2008

Posted on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

Calderoli says T-shirt gesture misunderstood

An Italian minister from an anti-immigrant party who wore a T-shirt that offended Muslims in 2006 said on Friday the gesture was misunderstood and his appointment should not damage relations with Libya.

Roberto Calderoli of the Northern League was appointed this week to the new government of Silvio Berlusconi, who was installed as prime minister for a third term. Berlusconi faced a diplomatic clash with Libya – and possible energy sanctions – after Tripoli made it clear it objected to Calderoli's appointment.

He quit Berlusconi's last government in 2006 after wearing a T-shirt showing a Danish cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed that angered Muslims worldwide. He was blamed for rioting that broke out at the Italian consulate in the Libyan city of Benghazi.

Calderoli was asked by Italian television about Libya's angry response to his appointment, and whether he regretted the T-shirt incident. He said he was sorry for the consequences of his act which he said was misinterpreted as anti-Islamic provocation. "Mine was a message of peace and rapprochement between the monotheistic religions but was misunderstood," he said.

Reuters, 9 May 2008

Posted on Friday, May 9, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

Sarkozy takes stand against far right anti-Muslim bigotry (not)

"Brigitte Bardot is facing prison if convicted for a fifth time of inciting racial hatred. Brigitte loves animals and hates Muslims, which is why she sent a petition to the president about halal butchers: 'I've had enough of being led by the nose by this whole population which is destroying us, destroying our country, imposing their ways.' Sarkozy takes a tough line on this sort of abuse. 'When you live in France', he is fond of reminding voters, 'you respect the rules. You don't have lots of wives, you don't circumcise your daughters, and you don't use the bath of your apartment to slaughter sheep in.' The peace prize is in the post, M President."

Fiachra Gibbons in the Guardian Paris Diary, 6 May 2008

Posted on Tuesday, May 6, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , |

Sam Harris backs Geert Wilders

The%20End%20of%20Faith.jpgSam Harris, author of The End of Faith, rallies to the defence of a far-right racist:

"Geert Wilders, conservative Dutch politician and provocateur, has become the latest projectile in the world's most important culture war: the zero-sum conflict between civil society and traditional Islam. Wilders, who lives under perpetual armed guard due to death threats, recently released a 15 minute film entitled Fitna ('strife' in Arabic) over the internet. The film has been deemed offensive because it juxtaposes images of Muslim violence with passages from the Qur'an. Given that the perpetrators of such violence regularly cite these same passages as justification for their actions, merely depicting this connection in a film would seem uncontroversial.

"Controversial or not, one surely would expect politicians and journalists in every free society to strenuously defend Wilders' right to make such a film. But then one would be living on another planet, a planet where people do not happily repudiate their most basic freedoms in the name of 'religious sensitivity'....

"The position of the Muslim community in the face of all provocations seems to be: Islam is a religion of peace, and if you say that it isn't, we will kill you. Of course, the truth is often more nuanced, but this is about as nuanced as it ever gets: Islam is a religion of peace, and if you say that it isn't, we peaceful Muslims cannot be held responsible for what our less peaceful brothers and sisters do. When they burn your embassies or kidnap and slaughter your journalists, know that we will hold you primarily responsible and will spend the bulk of our energies criticizing you for 'racism' and 'Islamophobia'....

"The connection between the doctrine of Islam and Islamist violence is simply not open to dispute. It's not that critics of religion like myself speculate that such a connection might exist: the point is that Islamists themselves acknowledge and demonstrate this connection at every opportunity and to deny it is to retreat within a fantasy world of political correctness and religious apology. Many western scholars, like the much admired Karen Armstrong, appear to live in just such a place. All of their talk about how benign Islam 'really' is, and about how the problem of fundamentalism exists in all religions, only obfuscates what may be the most pressing issue of our time: Islam, as it is currently understood and practiced by vast numbers of the world's Muslims, is antithetical to civil society....

"And if anyone in this debate can be credibly accused of racism, it is the western apologists and 'multiculturalists' who deem Arabs and Muslims too immature to shoulder the responsibilities of civil discourse. As Ayaan Hirsi Ali has pointed out, there is a calamitous form of 'affirmative action' at work, especially in western Europe, where Muslim immigrants are systematically exempted from western standards of moral order in the name of paying 'respect' to the glaring pathologies in their culture."

Huffington Post, 5 May 2008

Agreeing with the BNP ...

"Well, even a stopped clock is right two times a day and so it is that I find myself rather agreeing with the BNP's recently elected to the London Assembly Richard Barnbrook who says that he will press for the Union Flag to be flown permanently over City Hall, for burkas to be banned from public buildings and for official celebrations to mark St George's Day. He will resist the planned construction of a huge new mosque, the biggest place of worship in Britain, in Newham, East London.

"This seems fair enough to me – after all London IS British and not merely an overseas branch of Islamabad. I think the Burqa SHOULD be banned, and feel that the huge new mega mosque planned for East London should also be banned until such times as existing mosques prove they are not little more than recruiting offices for Jihad, and surely the flying of the Union Flag over City Hall is non-controversial?"

A Tangled Web, 6 May 2008

Posted on Tuesday, May 6, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , , |

Berlusconi to appoint far right Islamophobe to cabinet

Roberto_Calderoli.jpgRoberto Calderoli, 52, a senior member of the Northern League, enraged Muslims two years ago during the row over a set of Danish cartoons featuring the Prophet Mohammed. He appeared on television wearing a T-shirt printed with one of the cartoons. The Italian consulate in Libya was set on fire and 11 people died in riots.

Mr Calderoli has also threatened to defile the proposed site of a mosque in Padua by walking a pig over the ground. When Italy beat France in the 2006 World Cup, he said France had "sacrificed its identity by fielding niggers, Muslims and communists".

Despite the controversies, which forced him to resign as a minister for reform in 2006, Mr Calderoli is likely to get another job when Mr Berlusconi picks his cabinet because of the strong results obtained by the Northern League in the general election.

Daily Telegraph, 5 May 2008

See also "Muslims feel under siege as Italian Right sets up town vigilante groups" in the Times, 3 May 2008

Posted on Monday, May 5, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

Barnbrook calls for flying of Union Jack and a ban on burkas

The mainstream party candidates walked off the stage when Richard Barnbrook stepped up to speak after becoming, early on Saturday morning, the first member of the British National Party to win a seat on the London Assembly. Mr Barnbrook was unpeturbed. He expects to be treated as a pariah for the next four years, but insists that he will not be cowed. "If I have to be a lone wolf I will be one," he told The Times.

Mr Barnbrook, 47, said that he intends to become the voice of "true Londoners", fighting against political correctness and preferential treatment for racial minorities. He will press for the Union Jack to be flown permanently over City Hall, for burkas to be banned from public buildings and for official celebrations to mark St George's Day. He will resist the planned construction of a huge new mosque, the biggest place of worship in Britain, in Newham, East London.

The Times, 4 May 2008

Posted on Sunday, May 4, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , |

A new era of Islamophobia?

City%20Hall.jpg"What an election! We have the first Conservative Mayor for London and we also have the first racist Islamophobe from the BNP in the London Assembly. So what do we make of this? Is this the end of an era or is it a beginning of a new one? ...

"So what caused this shock result? Was it anti-Brown or anti-Labour sentiments? Was it the recognition that 'the Conservatives have changed into a party that can again be trusted after 30 years'? Was it the overt support of Muslims 4 Ken, as some have commented? Or was it the politics of fear created by the government and media? Can it even be as simple as 'he's been there too long’? We may never know the real reasons, as most voters will have different reasons for voting the way they do – but here is my thought on why the BNP got its first Assembly Member.

"If you recall the last 2 to 3 years, you will no doubt notice that the most discussed subject has been Islam and Muslims. The rancorous manner in which the government – a Labour government – attacked Islam and Muslim has been unforgivable. Together with the relentless and vitriolic media, it created the perfect atmosphere for the racist BNP to peddle its malevolence with impunity. In the eyes of the BBC this racist party has now become 'The anti-immigration British National Party'. Anti-immigration! When Jack Straw said that it’s not Ken's fault alone and that everybody in government had some responsibility, I sincerely hope he together with the likes of Ruth Kelly and others recall their Islam bashing and how they allowed the BNP to espouse the myth of 'Islamofascism'. And how the hatred they spew is becoming acceptable and mainstream. Maybe this is the 'new era' that has begun!"

Azad Ali assesses the results of the London elections.

Between the Lines, 3 May 2008

Mad Mel warns against 'the progressive Islamisation of London's East End'

Jamme%20Masjid%20mosque%20with%20minaret.jpg"From the East London Advertiser comes further news of the progressive Islamisation of London's East End, and the lengths to which Ken Livingstone is going to court the Muslim vote for tomorrow's mayoral election."

Melanie Phillips responds to the report that – shock, horror – Ken Livingstone has pledged to help raise funds for a major revamp of the Jamme Masjid mosque in Brick Lane. And, what's worse, the proposed development would feature a minaret.

"The height of this proposed minaret is no incidental matter", Phillips informs us. "The fact that it would tower over Brick Lane is designed to make a powerful symbolic statement of the supremacy of Islam over that area and the subjugation of all non-Islamic creeds. Like the proposed vast Olympic village mosque, also in east London, it is thus in itself an act of jihad against British society. That is what Ken is endorsing."

Melanie Phillips's blog, 30 April 2008

Predictably, the fascists of the British National Party find common ground with Phillips on this issue.

See BNP news article, 27 April 2008

Posted on Wednesday, April 30, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , |

The BNP, anti-semitism and Islamophobia

"... the BNP remain a fascist organization and racist to the core. Currently Islamaphobia plays a central role along with attacks on migrants of every kind. Anti-Semitism is hidden but rumbles away at the heart of the beast. Jews, Muslims, people of all faiths and none, migrants and settled communities have a common cause with workers as a whole in ensuring their upward path is halted and that they are thrown down and dashed on the rocks."

David Landau assesses the current political trajectory of the British National Party.

Click to read more ...

Posted on Monday, April 28, 2008 by Registered CommenterMartin Sullivan in , , |
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