Government’s ‘Prevent’ counter-terrorism strategy review criticised

The Governments review of the Prevent strategy into counter-terrorism has been met with strong criticism for its focus on activities in the Muslim community that are not directly associated with violence or terrorism.  An article in The New Statesman describes the proposed new approach – of focusing on measures to target what it describes as ‘non-violent extremism’ – as potentially alienating the entire Muslim community in the fight against terrorism.  It reports that senior Conservative figures such as Baroness Warsi, the Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, as well as  Charles Farr, the head of the office of security and extremism disagree with the approach in the Home Office’s Prevent Strategy.
Farooq Murad, Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain said:
“At a time when Muslims in the Middle East resoundingly endorse the universal values of human rights, democracy and the rule of law, is there any reason to believe that British Muslims are any different? The latest Prevent strategy seems to think so. For Muslims and public policy, security has become the only consideration on the agenda. It contains the implicit assumption that Muslims are less able to function in an open democracy than other people, more susceptible to totalitarian impulses and that they are more open to be incited to violence. It sends a very negative message to the community and is likely to increase Islamophobia.
“We agree that millions of pounds of taxpayers money – our money – has been wasted in the Prevent strategy, and we welcome the government’s resolve to refocus resources. But if the strategy is anything to go by, diverting money away from one bad idea to another — won’t necessarily accrue the results we all crave for: the eradication of terrorism.”
Isabella Sankey, Director of Policy for Liberty, said:

“The old Prevent strategy left Muslims feeling targeted and all taxpayers wondering where millions of pounds had gone.
But its gravest error was blurring the lines between dissent and criminality and between civil society and security agencies.
This is the danger that must be avoided in future. Block terrorist websites and stop prisons breeding hate by all means, but don’t turn teachers and doctors into spies.”

Responding to its focus on alleged extremism on university campuses, Nicola Dandridge Universities UK Chief Executive said:
“I simply dont recognise this description of universities as being complacent about terrorism…there is complex and fine line to be drawn between unlawful speech that should be banned and views that we do not agree with (but which) we have to challenge”
Click here for full article
Nabil Ahmed, President of the Federation of Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS) said:
“ FOSIS has consistently taken measured steps to engage with key stakeholders, including members of the government, on the issue of radicalisation on campus…”
FOSIS have invited Theresa May to engage with Muslim students at their national conference, following allegations that Universities and FOSIS are complacent about the threat of extremism on campus.
Click here for full release

Aaron Porter, President of the National Union of Students, said:
“Facing up to the challenges that non-violent extremism brings to campus life requires careful suppport and guidance from Government, not wild sensationalism that only serves to unfairly demonise Muslim students.  In our experience, groups like FOSIS are part of the solution, not part of the problem.”
Click here for full release

 ’Confronting Anti Muslim Hatred’ conference

Saturday 21 May

London Muslim Centre, Whitechapel Rd E1 1JX

Community figures, campaigners, academics, experts and victims of Islamophobia from across Europe discuss the effects of anti-Muslim hatred in Britain and across the world and how to campaign against it.

Kenza Drider – French Muslim Woman arrested for refusing to take off her hijab | Tony Benn | Mehdi Hasan – New Statesman | Dr Robert Lambert – European Muslim Research Centre | Aisha Alvi – Barrister at Law who won reinstatement in school after being suspended | Hiba Aburwein – European Forum on Muslim Women, Belgium | Peter Oborne – Daily Telegraph | Azad Ali – Islamic Forum of Europe | Liz Fekete – Institute of Race Relations | Seumas Milne – The Guardian | Salma Yaqoob – Respect | Dr. Sabine Schiffer – Germany | Dr Kamal el-Helbawy – Former Muslim Brotherhood spokesman | Dr Laura McDonald – Birmingham University | Marwan Muhammad – Collective Against Islamophobia in France | Muhammad Habibur-Rahman – London Muslim Centre | Dr AbdoolKarim Vakil – Muslim Council of Britain | Lindsey German – Stop the War Coalition | Dr Daud Abdullah – British Muslim Initiative | Nabeel Ahmed – Federation of Students Islamic Societies | John Rees – author, Imperialism and Resistance | Rizwaan Sabir Detained in solidarity after researching Al Qaeda for a PHD later released without charge | Lez Levidow – Campaign Against Criminalising Communities | Mohammed Ali – Islam Channel | Sabby DhaluOne Society Many Cultures | Lowkey – Rap artist and political activist | Rizwan Hussain – TV presenter

Free event with limited places to register visit : http://www.enoughcoalition.org.uk/

Campaigners welcome Stephen Lawrence murder trial Press release

One Society Many Cultures today welcomed the decision to put two men on trial for the murder of Stephen Lawrence, a Black teenager who was killed in a racist attack at a bus stop in Eltham, London, on 22 April 1993.

One Society Many Cultures pays tribute to the tireless commitment of the family of Stephen Lawrence.

Sabby Dhalu, Secretary of One Society Many Cultures said:

“Today’s decision would not have been possible, if not for the commitment of the family of Stephen Lawrence, who have had to overcome tragedy, heartbreak and institutional racism, and who are still pursuing justice which should be a basic human right.

“The Lawrence family have had to contend with the racism both from Stephen’s murderers and from a police and criminal justice system that failed to appropriately investigate Stephen’s murder and pursue his killers.

“11 years ago the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry was a watershed moment for the anti-racist movement in Britain. It highlighted the depth of institutional racism in Britain’s criminal justice system, including the way the racial murder of a Black person was not treated with the same seriousness as other murders.

“However 11 years on, many of the recommendations in the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry report have not been implemented. The proposals were deemed necessary to reduce the inequalities of the criminal justice system, so should all be implemented.

“One Society Many Cultures calls on the government to take action to ensure the Stephen Lawrence report recommendations are carried out in full. We hope that today’s announcement of a new trial will lead to justice. Our thoughts are with the family of Stephen Lawrence. “

Protest against France Niqab ban – Defend freedom of religious and cultural expression – No to Islamophobia

Monday 11 April, 6pm
Outside the French Embassy
58 Knightsbridge
London SW1X 7JT
(nearest tube Knightsbridge)

Called by Unite Against Fascism and One Society Many Cultures
Supported by the British Muslim Initiative and the Islamic Forum of Europe

The ban on the Niqab (full face veil) is due to come into force in France on Monday 11 April. This denies Muslims freedom of religion and cultural expression and the freedom of women to choose what they wear. Free and democratic societies should allow people to express their faith and culture, and women to dress however they choose. Although there are no proposals to introduce such legislation in Britain, the ban on the Niqab in France has provoked Islamophobic discussions and campaigns here in Britain.

Defend Multicultu​ralism-Cha​llenge Islamophob​ia OSMC Meeting

Meeting at Goldsmiths College Students Union,Stephen Lawrence Room Dixon Road SE14 Nearest station: New Cross / New Cross Road

Tuesday 22nd March 4pm-6pm
Defend multiculturalism, Challenge Islamophobia — Don’t let Cameron divide us
Speakers:
Dr Jonathan Githens-Mazer, Co-Director European Muslim Research Centre, University of Exeter
Sabby Dhalu, Secretary of One Society Many Cultures and Unite Against Fascism
Talha Ahmad, Muslim Council of Britain

Facebook Page:

 http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=186168444753981

Celebrate and defend our multicultural society: a response to the Searchlight ‘Fear and Hope’ report

By Sabby Dhalu, joint secretary, Unite Against Fascism
 
A report, ‘Fear and Hope’,[1] on attitudes in Britain to race and immigration, was launched by the Searchlight Educational Trust in early March. The report interprets the results of a survey conducted by Populus for the educational charity. However, while the results of the survey are very interesting, and deserve close study, the conclusions drawn by the report are contentious to say the least.
 
The headline from the report, picked up widely in the media, is the contention that the survey results suggest that 48 per cent of those surveyed would support an extreme right-wing party if it were clearly ‘non-violent’. This conclusion is based on the percentage of respondents who would ‘definitely support’ or ‘consider supporting’ a political party that ‘defends the English’, wants an English Parliament, would control immigration and challenge Islamic extremism as long as they were ‘non-violent’.
 
The first and obvious point to make is that this is hardly the definition of a far right party – all major parties entered the last election on a platform of controlling immigration and challenging Islamic extremism, and the issue of defending the English and wanting an English Parliament does not describe modern-day fascism. 
 
Moreover, even if the British National Party (BNP) puts off some voters because of its known neo-fascist background, the electoral performance of the UK Independence Party (UKIP), shows that even a ‘mainstream’ hard right party cannot pick up 48 per cent of the vote. Even its remarkable showing at the Barnsley by-election this week only put it on 12 per cent – in a seat which had previously recorded above trend votes for the far right. It would be nonsensical to suggest that UKIP could generally storm ahead of the Tories on the basis of support for an English parliament. The disaster for the Tories and the Lib Dems in the Barnsley by-election is not due to the attraction of racist parties but the impact of the economic situation in squeezing living standards, falling real wages and unemployment.
 
The evidence from a much wider ‘survey’ – the last General Election – is that when the population had the option of a mainstream, hard right party, it didn’t vote for it. So the survey results on this issue clearly call for a much more detailed examination than that offered by the report.
 
As countless other surveys over decades have shown, the issues that appear to motivate voters when raised in isolation, sink down their priorities when faced with all the issues confronting them and the real choices in a General Election. Fundamental issues of jobs, living standards, welfare provision and other bread and butter issues are far more important to voters than the defence of Englishness or the fierceness of promised immigration controls.
 
Overall, the report interprets the survey results as indicating a crisis of ‘English identity’, which it insists has to be addressed if this is not to attach itself to extreme right-wing solutions. However, the report’s conclusions as to how to respond to this alleged crisis suggest a series of concessions to the anti-multicultural, anti-Islam, anti-immigration agenda of the right.
 
Indeed, Searchlight’s own response is to shift their agenda from a focus on campaigning against fascism and neo-Nazism and to set up a new campaign – A Plague on Both Your Houses – that will equally prioritise Islamic ‘extremism’. Searchlight’s case for this appears to be that it is a failure to address ‘Islamic extremism’ which is driving those seeking an ‘English identity’ into the arms of the far right. This, the report claims, is the lesson of the survey results. However this is only possible through a skewed interpretation and less than forensic examination of its results.
 
First, the report makes no acknowledgement of the fact that leading questions always introduce a bias in the results. It is an ABC of polling on attitudes that the opinions expressed are highly dependent on the way and the context in which the question is asked. In other words, if you ask people if something is a problem they will generally agree.
 
When added to the constant media scare campaigns against Muslims and Islam – Sharia law, Halal meat, the Burqa debate and many others being just the most recent – it is not so surprising that “52% white Britons agree with the proposition that ‘Muslims create problems in the UK’”. Certainly groups like the English Defence League try to whip up an unfounded fear that Islam is threatening the ‘British way of life’. And the recent revelations that the Daily Star deliberately made up anti-Muslim stories to whip up these fears – like non-existent bans on Christmas, piggy-banks and the like – demonstrate just how extensive this is.
 
Secondly, some of the results produced by the survey present a more positive picture than the report would have us to believe. For example, the survey reveals that 63% of white Britons agree with the proposition that ‘On the whole, immigration into Britain has been a bad thing for the country’. This is evidently a strongly ‘anti-immigration’ result. But this is not contrasted with the result on different but related questions. So, asked what is their preferred policy on immigration 58%, 62% and 69% of Asian, white and black people respectively, think skilled and unskilled immigrants ‘who will help the economy’ should be allowed into the country, against 39%, 34% and 21% respectively who thought all immigration should be stopped.
 
Also the when asked whether “there are some things that people should not be allowed to say about race and if necessary they should be prosecuted if they do”, over 55% of all social class groupings (including 62% of C2s) agreed with the proposition. Whereas in response to “people should be allowed to say what they believe about race, however critical or offensive it might be”, less than 45% of respondents agreed.[2]  
 
Rather than thorough questioning analysis of the survey results, the report adopts wholesale the flimsily argued case that Britain is now divided into a series of ‘tribes’, with descriptions like ‘latent hostiles’, ‘identity ambivalents’ and ‘confident multiculturals’, which, it is claimed, define our broad attitudes to our identity and issues of race and immigration. The report argues that it is appealing to the concerns of these ‘tribes’ that should be the focus. And therefore the major political parties – and Searchlight itself – should respond by prioritizing a campaign that equally focuses on Muslim extremism as well as the far right.
 
Apart from the fact that this approach, if adopted generally, would simply feed into and deepen anti-Muslim prejudice, it will not reap electoral gain – as the report appears to suggest to both Ed Miliband and David Cameron.
 
There is much previous work – which this report does not reference – which demonstrates that immigration, race and related issues often poll very high in attitudinal surveys but this does not translate into the way votes are cast in elections. When it comes to the ballot box itself, these issues tends to drop well down most people’s priorities in choosing a particular party – except in some local situations where the election has been preceded by a particularly race-driven issue.
 
Nonetheless, the Searchlight report both argues that this raises a real spectre of mass support for the extreme right, and that the major political parties should adjust to these concerns.
 
Ed Miliband is warned that his policy of appealing to the ‘progressive majority’ and ‘squeezed middle’ has failed to address the issues of English identity politics. Whereas the approach embodied in Cameron’s Munich speech attacking multiculturalism is praised for addressing ‘…concerns over immigration and a changing world, as well as their belief that newcomers should accept the British way of life’.
 
But the truth is there are very few votes in playing the race card – at least for Labour – and the evidence shows that strong assertion of the benefits of diversity, multiculturalism and the contribution of immigrant communities can impact positively on perceptions of these issues.
 
Contrary to Searchlight’s urgings, Ed Miliband should firmly reject this approach. There are no votes for Labour in shifting to the right on race and immigration. For example, research conducted by Greenberg[3] into the 2010 election, showed that Labour did not lose the election because it was ‘too soft’ on immigration. The Greenberg research revealed that there were only 8% of voters who had seriously considered voting Labour but then didn’t. But this group was the least hostile of all groups to immigration, while also being the most hostile to cuts and in favour of tax increases. Labour lost 5 million votes between 1997 and 2010, overwhelmingly on the failure to deliver improvement in living standards and in reaction to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The idea that Labour can recover from this electorally by attacking the interests of Muslims, immigrants and other components of its core support is a dangerous fiction.   
 
The same research showed that the Lib Dems outpolled Labour only on one issue – their policy of an amnesty for long-term resident illegal immigrants. Tory voters on the other hand were the most hostile to immigration. As austerity undermines the Tories electoral support, we can expect more appeals to the Tory backwoods on immigration and race. It was no coincidence that Cameron’s speech in Munich threatening the funding for even moderate Muslim groups and attacking multiculturalism came at the point that polls put the Tories behind Labour for the first time since the General Election.
 
But these facts do not prevent the Fear and Hope report using their survey results as the political justification for launching a new campaign that equally prioritises opposition to far-right racist extremism and ‘Islamic extremism’, under the slogan ‘A plague on both their houses’.
 
It is of great concern that an organisation that presents itself as a key campaign against racism and the extreme right should go down this road, as it is likely to only strengthen the prejudice and unfounded fears about Muslim extremism that their own survey revealed.
 
Firstly, there is strong evidence to suggest that the best way to drive back racism is to positively campaign to highlight the benefits of diversity. Where the BNP has made above-trend progress has often been linked to local sensationalist racist campaigns, usually conducted by the local media with scant regard for the facts. This was the case in Keighley where the BNP progressed after a media furore about alleged ‘Asian grooming’, in Oldham following a similar campaign against ‘anti-white racist attacks’, or Barking where the local media legitimised the myth that African migrants were being given priority for public housing.
 
On the other hand, where local authorities and the media have promoted the benefits of diversity, community integration is stronger, and support for multicultural life deeper. For example, in Leicester – Labour’s only gain in the 2007 local elections – the council went on to run its successful ‘One Leicester’ campaign. When the EDL tried to hold an event there it met the strongest cross-community response from any city where it has tried to go. Or in London under Ken Livingstone where, in the aftermath of the 7/7 bombings, the 2006 Annual London survey conducted by Ipsos Mori found that London’s cultural diversity was viewed positively by 85 percent of people in the capital and 71 percent believed there were good relations between different racial, ethnic and religious communities.
 
Secondly, linking opposition to the far right to a campaign against ‘Islamic extremism’ is more likely to whip up exaggerated concerns that feed into the far right, rather than appease those who see this as a vital issue. The slogan ‘A plague on both your houses’ clearly implies that the problems are similar in approach and scale. But this is ridiculous. The BNP won around 5 per cent of the vote in the last General Election, and got much higher votes in some specific areas. No ‘Muslim’ parties – ‘extremist’ or otherwise – stood for election, for the very simple reason that they would get statistically zero support, including from the Muslim community. Moreover, given that the entire Muslim population (around 2.5 million in Britain) is less than 5 per cent of the electorate, every single Muslim of voting age would have to support extremist Islam for it to approach the degree of support for the BNP!
 
In fact, of course, polling on attitudes has repeatedly shown that Britain’s Muslims are more loyal, more law-abiding and feel more patriotic as a group that the white population and not at all ‘extremist’, however ‘extremist’ is defined.
 
In this context, it is of particular concern that it entirely unclear how Searchlight does defines the ‘Muslim extremists’ that it proposes to campaign against. One of the many features of the Islamophobia that is sweeping through this country is that many mainstream Muslim organisations have found themselves labelled as ‘extremist’, and feel that the suggestion is that Islam is by its nature extremist.
 
Muslims seeking to ensure that their communities are represented fully in the political process have frequently faced accusations of ‘extremism’ – as for example was claimed against Lutfur Rahman in Tower Hamlets. Mosques, which in fact play a key role in integrating young people from their communities and combating the sense of exclusion that in some cases has led individuals to link up with groups proposing violence, have found themselves vilified as whipping up extremism. The Muslim Council of Britain which is the largest umbrella body of the Muslim community in Britain and is extremely ‘moderate’ and non-party political, has found itself labeled as ‘extremist’ because someone associated with it expressed a view that armed resistance to the occupying troops in Iraq was justified.
 
Quite apart from making a whole organisation responsible for the views of an individual not speaking on their behalf, this raises the issue of what constitutes ‘extremism’. Is this view on the Iraqi opposition ‘extremist’ or a legitimate although minority point of view? How will Searchlight define Muslim ‘extremism’? How does it propose to draw the line between the protection of minority points of view and the rule of the majority, which is the essence of the liberal consensus?
Cameron’s ‘muscular liberalism’ of his Munich speech in February clearly proposes drawing the line against all those who do not subscribe to some ill-defined ‘British values’ – in other words, breaking from the essence of liberalism itself, the core of which is the right to hold and express minority views, cultures and values.
 
As Cameron put it in his speech: ‘Islam is a religion, observed peacefully and devoutly by over a billion people. Islamist extremism is a political ideology, supported by a minority. At the furthest end are those who back terrorism to promote their ultimate goal: an entire Islamist realm, governed by an interpretation of Sharia. Move along the spectrum, and you find people who may reject violence, but who accept various parts of the extremist world-view including real hostility towards western democracy and liberal values.’ It is this whole spectrum Cameron proposes to target.
 
Socialists and communists are not unfamiliar with this terminology. They have frequently been accused of ‘extremism’ on exactly the same basis. Equally the same could be argued for rather a large number of those on the right-wing of the Tory party. Or indeed within the ranks of fundamentalist Christian currents.
 
Is Searchlight’s proposed campaign against ‘Islamic extremism any different from Cameron’s?
‘Muslim extremism’ in the sense of those who advocate terrorist attacks on Western populations as a political response to the perceived culpability of the West for the oppression of Muslims globally is a minuscule current in Britain, composed of handfuls of people. The elevation of this to a perceived level of threat coming from entire Muslim communities, evidently creates a sense of isolation, siege and exclusion in the Muslim communities. This perversely can feed extremism.
 
The report on this survey does not delve into the real reasons for the misplaced concerns and misconceptions on Islam or immigration in Britain today. Many previous surveys have uncovered more information than this one – for example, the huge overestimate of the level of immigration or of the number of Muslims in the country by most respondents – which both explain the level of concern and indicate the misconceptions that need to be addressed.
 
For example, the idea that Britain attracts a uniquely high level of immigration is one that should be vocally rebutted. In fact, Britain’s foreign-born population at less than 5 million (or around 9.7 per cent of the whole population) puts Britain 15th out of 27 economies surveyed by the OECD (2005 figures). This compares to 33.4 per cent in Luxembourg or 23.8% in Australia and Switzerland and 33.4% in Luxembourg.
 
Much of the concern about immigration stems from the belief that it creates unemployment. In fact, in 2009 for example, those born overseas accounted for just under 4 million of those in employment in Britain, while British citizens working overseas are currently just under 5 million. The free movement of labour works both ways, and to the benefit of British workers.
 
Above all, immigration brings a significant benefit to the British economy, estimated at £2.5bn net benefit to the public finances in 2000, and will be substantially higher by now due to increases in the total number of immigrants and the proportion that are of working age. In 2006 the government estimated that immigration’s net contribution to GDP was to add £6bn in annual growth. This creates more jobs, it does not take them away. Similarly government research has found that a 1% increase in the ratio of immigrants leads to an increase of up to 0.4 per cent in average earnings.
 
The assault on multiculturalism launched by Cameron, and praised by this report for addressing real concerns, in fact feeds these misconceptions and undermines the understanding of the reality of England and Britain today. There is a real danger of rising racism in Britain today, but not because of a crisis of English identity or a failure to confront ‘Islamic extremism’.
The real danger comes from attempts by mainstream politicians to deflect public anger about the impact of the economic crisis, falling living standards and cuts in services, on to innocent scapegoats – immigrants, Muslims, multiculturalism.
 
Many sections of the population most definitely do feel under attack. This is not because they are ‘English’ or suffering a national identity crisis, but because their living standards really are suffering as a result of austerity, inflation and cuts. It is all too easy to direct people towards a soft target on the basis of racism and an alleged discrimination against the English, when economic and political alternatives seem unavailable.  
 
The launch of this report now, and the participation of key figures on the right of the Labour Party, clearly indicates that one aim is to apply pressure to the Labour Party to adopt this approach.
Much of the discussion around why Labour lost the last election has drifted on to this ground. But this is simply avoiding a more fundamental discussion on how the impact of the previous Labour government’s economic policies and military interventions undermined its support. It is to be hoped that the present Labour leadership rejects this pressure and continues to make the case for diversity and multiculturalism.
 
It is very sad that Searchlight should choose this moment to shift their focus from fighting the fascists to ‘Islamic extremism’. At a time when austerity and cuts are creating fertile ground for scape-goating and racism, providing a breeding ground for the extreme right, the real priority should be to explain the enormous economic and social contribution that generations of immigrants have made to this country, and defending Muslim communities from those who would blame them for their feelings of malaise.
 
Rather than getting lost in their own terminology of ‘latent hostiles’, ‘identity ambivalents’ and ‘active hostiles’, Searchlight should work with all those seeking to break down racist myths, assert the benefits of diversity and expose the violent nature of the extreme right.
 

[1] http://www.fearandhope.org.uk/executive-summary/
[2] http://www.fearandhope.org.uk/project-report/themes

PCC Must Investigate Daily Star Anti-Muslim Bias

Nine campaigners have today called on the Chair of the Press Complaints Commission to instigate a full investigation into allegations of systematic anti-Muslim editorial bias at the Daily Star newspaper.
 
In a letter to Baroness Buscombe, Chair of the PCC, they call upon the PCC to urgently investigate the issue of anti-Muslim and anti-Islamic bias in the Daily Star and in other newspapers. The letter, initiated by the campaigning group, One Society Many Cultures, follows widespread concern arising from allegations made in the resignation letter of former Daily Star journalist, Richard Peppiatt. In his resignation letter to owner Richard Desmond he stated that the paper deliberately sanctioned an anti-Muslim bias, and that unfounded stories were promoted to achieve this aim.
 
Sabby Dhalu, Secretary of One Society Many Cultures and one of the signatories to the letter to the PCC said:
 
“ These accusations of anti-Muslim bias are of grave concern, especially as they come from an insider, who knows the workings of the Daily Star. The PCC should immediately investigate the claims Richard Peppiatt has made in his resignation letter.
 
The negative coverage of Muslims across much of the national press has been evident for some time and has been the subject of widespread concern that it is whipping up Islamophobia and undermining community cohesion. Whilst there has been some academic work that has shown anti-Muslim bias in the national press, this is the first time a whistleblower, from inside a national paper has come forward and exposed the unpleasantly biased workings of the newsroom of one of the UK’s daily papers.
 
The PCC has a duty to all of us to investigate these accusations. If the PCC finds that the  Daily Star has distorted facts and intentionally mislead readers to whip up anti muslim sentiments, then we will expect the PCC to take appropriate action against the paper.
 
 
A full copy of the letter to the PCC can be found here:
 
11th March 2011
 
Dear Baroness Buscombe,
In recent years, we have become increasingly concerned about the portrayal of Islam and Muslims in the British press. For some time, there has been a widely held suspicion that some papers have specifically manufactured stories about Muslims and the Islamic faith.  It is our view that these stories have had a profoundly negative impact on the social cohesion of our society and threaten the positive contribution multiculturalism makes across our country.
 
Until now, establishing corporate responsibility within national newspapers for the large numbers of false and malicious stories has not been possible. However, the letter from Richard Peppiatt resigning from Richard Desmond’s Northern and Shell Group makes serious allegations about the lengths the Daily Star will go to in creating inaccurate, untrue and manufactured stories about Muslims living in Britain.
 
The resignation letter of Richard Peppiatt alleges that there is a culture of anti Islamic attitudes inside the Daily Star. Additionally, the accusations made by Richard Peppiatt, if true, add significantly to the findings to the 2007 report by the Mayor of London which showed that in one weeks analysis of the national print media, 91% of stories on Islam or Muslims were negative.
 
Among the other examples the report highlighted were fabricated news reports of Christmas being banned in one town to avoid offending Muslims and the claim that Nat West Bank had withdrawn children’s piggy banks following threats from ‘Muslim extremists’.
 
The Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Conduct is unambiguous on the responsibilities of Editors and newspapers in reporting accurately. In section 1(i) Accuracy, it states
The Press must take care not to publish inaccurate, misleading or distorted information, including pictures
In section 12(i) Discrimination of the same code, the PCC clearly sets out the responsibilities of editors in reporting on matters of race and religion, it says
The press must avoid prejudicial or pejorative reference to an individual’s race, colour, religion, gender, sexual orientation or to any physical or mental illness or disability.
The information alleged in Richard Peppiatt’s resignation letter, if true, shows that Richmond Desmond and the Northern and Shell Group of papers have failed to comply with Section 12(i) of the PCC Editors Code of Conduct.
Not withstanding that Richard Peppiatt’s allegations are denied by the Daily Star, there is now an overwhelming case for the PCC to hold an independent enquiry into the specific allegations made in Richard Peppiatt’s resignation letter. Specifically, we believe that the PCC must rigorously investigate the allegations that the Daily Star has manufactured stories about Muslims and Islam.
In addition, we believe the PCC sponsored enquiry needs to go further in establishing the true nature and scale of Islamophobia in the national press. It is now nearly 5 years since the last report into the portrayal of Muslims and Islam by newspapers. In our view, since that report in 2007, the situation has deteriorated, with even greater negative emphasis on British Muslims and Islam.
Britain has a long established tradition of press freedom. It is not our aim to see those freedoms removed. However, with freedom must come responsibility, and it is clear that the national press are today failing in their duty to fairly and accurately report on British Muslims and Islam. The only way to re-establish trust from a significant section of our society is for the PCC to hold a full and independent investigation into the specific accusations made by Richard Peppiatt coupled with a broader look at the portrayal of Islam by the national press
Yours sincerely,
Diane Abbott MP
Claude Moraes MEP
Edie Friedman, Executive Director Jewish Council For Racial Equality
Anas Altikriti and Mohammed Sawahla, British Muslim Initiative
Bruce Kent, Vice Chair, Pax Christi
Billy Hayes, General Secretary, Communication Workers Union
Sabby Dhalu, Secretary,  One Society Many Cultures & Joint Secretary, Unite Against Fascism
Martin Smith, Love Music Hate Racism

Event

Public Rally: Defend multiculturalism – No to Islamophobia Wed 9th March 7pm

Don’t let David Cameron divide us

Wednesday 9 March, 7pm
Friends House, 173 Euston Road,
London NW1 2BJ

(Nearest Tube: Euston / Euston Square)

Speakers include:

Peter Hain MP
Billy Hayes CWU general secretary
Mehdi Hasan Senior Politics Editor, New Statesman
Edie Friedman Executive Director, Jewish Council for Racial Equality
Dr. Faisal Hanjra Assistant General Secretary Muslim Council of Britain       Dilowar Khan Executive Director of London Muslim Centre
Ismail Patel British Muslim Initiative
Dr. Shahrar Ali The Green Party
George Galloway Respect Party
Zita Holbourne TUC Race Relations Committee
Shafiur Rahman Islamic Forum of Europe Executive Director
Jerry Dammers ex-Specials/musician
Asif Hussein London Chair, Federation of Student Islamic Societies
Weyman Bennett Unite Against Fascism joint secretary
Martin Smith Love Music Hate Racism
Kanja Sesay NUS Black Students Officer
Mike Rosen broadcaster/poet
Avaes Mohammad spoken word poet

Joint chairs:
Sabby Dhalu One Society Many Cultures Secretary/Unite Against Fascism Joint Secretary
and Hassan Mahamdallie

Joint chairs:
Sabby Dhalu One Society Many Cultures Secretary/Unite Against Fascism Joint Secretary
and Hassan Mahamdallie

Hosted by: UAF and OSMC

Supported by: Unite, BMI, CWU, LMHR, PCS, UCU, IFE

David Cameron’s ill-judged speech attacking multicultural Britain on the same day as the English Defence League’s march in Luton has been condemned by politicians, trade unionists, Muslim and other faith communities and many others. His comments have been welcomed by the EDL, BNP and the Front National in France. He singled out the Muslim community at a time when rising Islamophobia is resulting in increasingly violent hate-crime against Muslims.

Cameron attacked ‘state multiculturalism’ and proposed the creation of a new, but undefined, ‘national identity’. This can only serve to undermine the contribution of diverse communities. Multiculturalism is a reality in Britain as it is a nation built on waves of immigration for thousands of years. This has enriched the economy, society and our culture in ways we take for granted.

Multiculturalism is the right for everyone to live their life as they choose, as long as it does not infringe on the rights of others to do the same. We believe this is a fundamental part of freedom and democracy.

Click here to sign the UAF statement.

For more info visit: www.uaf.org.uk and www.onesocietymanycultures.org
Email: info@uaf.org.uk or onesocietymanycultures@googlemail.com
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Mayor of Tower Hamlets and community leaders come together to condemn homophobia

Posters of a homophobic nature were recently identified and removed from locations across the borough.

The descriptions of these posters are similar to those that have been found in 2010 in the borough, and elsewhere in South West London and Nottingham.

The posters have been reported to the Metropolitan Police, and the matter is being treated as a homophobic hate crime. All lines of enquiry are being pursued by police both within Tower Hamlets and London wide to identify and prosecute those responsible.

Following these incidents the Mayor of Tower Hamlets, alongside members of the Interfaith Forum and Rainbow Hamlets, have come together to condemn these messages of hate.

Mayor Lutfur Rahman, Chair of Tower Hamlets Partnership said:

“Tower Hamlets has a proud history of challenging prejudice and promoting equality.  There is no place for hate in Tower Hamlets and we take a zero-tolerance approach to homophobia.  Across all religions, partner organisations and community groups there is unanimity in the belief that by working together we can build a strong and cohesive community.  There are many shared values that we can unite behind and all attempts by those at the fringes to sow the seeds of division and hatred will be rebuffed.

I have personally met with the co-chairs of Rainbow Hamlets (Tower Hamlets Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Community Forum) and am committed to working with them and the wider community to promote equality.”

Reverend Alan Green, Chair of the Tower Hamlets Inter Faith Forum said:

“People of faith in Tower Hamlets are proud to be part of this diverse and vibrant borough, in which mutual respect and tolerance are vital to social harmony. We oppose all who seek to undermine these values – homophobic hate has no place in Tower Hamlets. Whatever their backgrounds of the people they do not speak in the name of Islam, Christianity or the other religions represented here.”

Dilwar Khan, Director of the London Muslim Centre said:

“We stand together with our fellow citizens against all forms of hatred, including homophobia. We are committed to building strong and cohesive communities in Tower Hamlets, and our strength is that we will not let incidents of hate divide us.”

The Chairs of Rainbow Hamlets LGBT Community Forum said:

“We condemn such activity and call on all communities to join forces against such extreme views. We also condemn those who use these incidents to create a moral panic and stoke up racist or Islamaphobic sentiment. At present the people responsible cannot be accurately determined, but it is clear that whoever is responsible, they do not represent any of the local communities and their sole purpose is to spread fear and mistrust. This we are determined to prevent them from doing.

We welcome the repudiation of these tactics from the Tower Hamlets Inter Faith Forum, London Muslim Centre and the Mayor of Tower Hamlets. We intend to work with partners to organise an event in May to coincide with the International Day Against Homophobia, and look forward to inviting the Mayor, the Borough Commander and all communities of the borough to participate.”

If any further homophobic posters are identified by the public, they are encouraged to report them to the Metropolitan police on 0033 123 1212. If possible, please take a photograph of the poster ensuring that you record the time and location. If the poster can be removed in one piece please do so, placing it in a box with the sticky side up and if possible take to your local police station. All these measures will help police investigations.

To date there have been 10 reports of crimes in Tower Hamlets that have been identified as homophobic or transphobic this year. This compares with 74 in 2010. We actively encourage people to report all incidents of hate crime as this enables us to pursue enforcement action and bring perpetrators to justice.

February 24, 2011

http://www.towerhamlets.gov.uk/news/council_news/february/tower_hamlets_community_leader.aspx

Unite Against Fascism Statement responding to David Cameron – Add your name

UAF officers have joined MPs, musicians, artists, campaigners, academics, trade unionists and others to condemn prime minister David Cameron’s recent declaration that multiculturalism had “failed” and his attacks on Britain’s Muslims community:

We believe David Cameron’s statement that multiculturalism has failed was a dangerous declaration of intent. David Cameron’s speech was reminiscent of Margaret Thatcher’s infamous 1978 statement that Britain was “being swamped by alien cultures”. He has branded Britain’s Muslims as the new “enemy within” in the same way as Thatcher attacked the miners and trade unions.

David Cameron is attempting to drive a wedge between different communities by linking Britain’s multicultural society with terrorism and national security. David Cameron’s speech was made on the same day as the English Defence League brought its bigotry and violence to the streets of Luton.

Mr Cameron’s aim is simple as it is crude – to deflect the anger against his government’s cuts from the bankers and onto the Muslim community. The prime minister is aping attacks by other European leaders like France’s Nicolas Sarkozy, who passed legislation banning the veil, and Angela Merkel, who has also made statements denouncing multiculturalism in Germany.

We believe that our multicultural society and the respect and solidarity it is built on is a cause for pride, and reject any moves by this government to undermine and destroy it.

We must not allow this coalition government to turn the tide back to the days when it was acceptable, through ignorance and fear, for people with a different religion, culture or skin colour to be scapegoated and treated as inferior or outsiders.

>> Click here to add your name to this statement

Initial signatories

Martin Smith Love Music Hate Racism, Peter Hain MP, Jeremy Corbyn MP, Ken Livingstone politician, Salma Yaqoob councillor and leader of Respect, Bob Crow RMT general secretary, Billy Hayes CWU general secretary, Mark Serwotka PCS general secretary, Zita Holbourne TUC race relations committee, Dr Rob Berkeley director, Runnymede Trust, Ziauddin Sardar writer, Farooq Murad secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, Professor Tariq Modood director of the Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol, Mohammed Sawalha president of British Muslim Iniative, Dr Chris Shannahan, Benjamin Zephaniah poet, Lauren Booth broadcaster and journalist, Michael Rosen author, China Miéville author, Dr Avaes Mohammad poet, playwright, performer, analytical chemist, Sabrina Mahfouz, poet and playwright, N-Dubz band – Tulisa Contostavlos, Dappy (Dino Contostavlos) and Richard “Fazer” Rawson, Drew McConnell musician, Babyshambles, Lowkey musician, Itch musician, The King Blues, Daniel Stephens (Dan Le Sac) musician, David Peter Meads (Scroobius Pip) musician, Blaine Harrison singer, Mystery Jets, Kid British band – Adio Merchant and Simeon McLean, Jeff Mirza comic and actor, Sabby Dhalu joint secretary Unite Against Fascism and secretary One Society Many Cultures, Lindsey German convenor, Stop the War Coalition, Hassan Mahamdallie activist, Weyman Bennett joint secretary Unite Against Fascism, Gary McFarlane NUJ London magazine branch and Expose the BNP, Kanja Ibrahim Sesay NUS black students’ officer and NUS antiracism antifascism convenor, Frances Rifkin Equity, Dr Jonathan Githens-Mazer, co-director, European Muslim Research Centre, Bruce Kent Pax Christi and vice-chair One Society Many Cultures, Shemiza Rashid director, Creative Muslim Network, Laura Miles vice-chair UCU equality committee, Gargi Bhattachryya UCU NEC, Sean Vernell UCU NEC, Sue Bond PCS vice-president, Rev. Ray Gaston interfaith enabler, Birmingham Methodist Church (personal capacity), Madani Younis artistic director, Freedom Studios, Bradford, and the Artists of Freedom Studios, Mohammed Ali Aerosolarabic, Rabbi Lee Wax, chair, IKETH (Inter-religious Conference for European Women Theologians, Musleh Faradhi Islamic Forum Europe, Danny Dorling author and professor, Sheffield University, David Armstrong UCU NEC, Jean Crocker UCU NEC, Futureheads band – Barry Hyde David “Jaff” Craig, Peter Brewsi, Ross Millard, Logic musician, Tubelord band – Joseph Prendergast, David Catmur, Tom Coulson-Smith and James Elliot Field, Dinosaur Pile-up band – Matt Bigland, Harry Johns and Mike Sheils, Luqman Ali, Kinsi Abdulleh, Sarah Pickthall, Ayaan Aden, Tristan McConnell, Alan Whitaker, president UCU, Keith Malinson UCU NEC, Malcolm Povey UCU NEC, Angie McConnell chair, UCU equality committee, Maeve Landman vice-chair UCU equality committee, Marion Hersh UCU NEC, Mark Campbell UCU NEC, Gavin Reid, chair UCU education committee, John Murphy UCU NEC, Richard McEwan UCU NEC

www.uaf.org.uk