Society

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Politicising Dissent: Michael Gove’s New Extremist Definition is ‘an Attack on Civil Liberties’

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 15/03/2024 - 12:51am in

The new definition of extremism announced by the Communities Secretary Michael Gove today is a blatant attack on civil liberties and free speech.

We believe this new definition is a highly politicised and undemocratic polemic aimed at trying to exclude and ostracise peaceful and law-abiding Muslim organisations that have been critical of the government from having a voice. Labelling a group that is critical of Government policy as ‘extremist’ is a lazy and convenient way of avoiding dialogue. It is a tactic more suited to authoritarian repressive regimes stifling dissent rather than a pluralistic Western democracy silencing those exposing UK Government complicity in the Gaza ‘plausible genocide’ as designated by the International Court of Justice.

The new definition is ;

Extremism is the promotion or advancement of an ideology based on violence, hatred or intolerance, that aims to: 

  • negate or destroy the fundamental rights and freedoms of others; or
  • undermine, overturn or replace the UK’s system of liberal parliamentary democracy and democratic rights; or
  • intentionally create a permissive environment for others to achieve the results in (1) or (2).
  • negate or destroy the fundamental rights and freedoms of others; or
  • undermine, overturn or replace the UK’s system of liberal parliamentary democracy and democratic rights; or
  • intentionally create a permissive environment for others to achieve the results in (1) or (2).
  • Under (1) none of the aforementioned organisations have sought to negate the rights or freedoms of others, and we await to see the evidence upon which any of our organisations would meet this part of the definition. Indeed given the focus in the Government Press Release on “Islamist extremists” in Muslim communities, we expect that this part of the definition will be used to label Muslim groups exercising their democratic right to legitimate criticism and dissent as ‘promoting hatred’ and thus impacting on the freedoms of other groups.

    Under (2), again none of the aforementioned organisations are seeking to replace the “UK’s system of liberal parliamentary democracy”. We note the manner in which  the definition has been introduced, deliberately avoiding any parliamentary scrutiny debate or criticism, is itself undermining our Parliamentary democracy.  

    Under (3) it is clear that the context for this new ‘anti-extremism’ drive emanates from the Government’s perspective from recent rises in antisemitism and anti-Muslim hate.  

    Moreover, we have to consider whether the Government’s own track record of ‘extremist’ policies has created this ‘permissive environment’ where hate crime is flourishing.

    The Government has a long history of racist and Islamophobic policies including the Windrush Scandal, the ‘hostile environment’ and the discredited Prevent Strategy. More recently senior Conservative MPs have made blatantly racist and Islamophobic comments. The former Deputy Chair of the Conservative Party Lee Anderson stated that ‘Islamists’ had ‘got control’ of the London Mayor Sadiq Khan. Former Home Secretary Suella Braverman said “the truth is that the Islamists, the extremists and the antisemites are in charge now."

    The former Prime Minister, Liz Truss spoke at a right-wing conference in the US and said “there’s going to be by-election in the next few weeks, and it could be a radical Islamic party win in that by-election. So that is a possibility.” It thus appears that such comments by senior Conservative MPs are driven by a hatred or intolerance of people from the Muslim community, and thus would fall foul of this definition.  

    Gove himself has a long track record of Islamophobic views and associations. He is a founding member of the Henry Jackson Society which is neo-Conservative think tank that has promoted an anti-Muslim agenda over many years. Despite having no expertise in Islam, Islamic theology or history he authored a book called Celsius 7/7 published in 2006  in which he highlighted the threat of “Islamism” in Britain.

    He led the government’s role in ‘The Trojan Horse’ affair. This falsely accused a number of schools in Birmingham of an ‘Islamist takeover’ on the back of a fake letter , perpetuating Islamophobic tropes of Muslims being a ‘fifth column’ and a threat to British democracy. Subsequent inquiries found no evidence of radicalisation in these schools. Given his own ‘extremist’ credentials, for him to be lecturing others as to who is or is not an extremist is an example of rank hypocrisy, and there would appear to be a persuasive argument that he is also an extremist on his own definition!

    The Government’s proposals have been criticised by the Archbishop of Canterbury and remarkably also by three former Conservative Home Secretaries warning him that  “no political party uses the issue to seek short term tactical advantage.”  This indicates that Michael Gove’s policies appear to be ‘extremist ‘even within his own party.

    Gove stated in the commons that “Islamism is a totalitarian ideology which seeks to divide, calls for the establishment of an Islamic state governed by sharia law and seeks the overthrow of liberal democratic principles”, and added “Organisations such as the Muslim Association of Britain, which is the British affiliate of the Muslim Brotherhood and other groups such as CAGE and MEND, all give rise to concern for their Islamist orientation and views.”

    We challenge him to provide the evidence to back up his view that the organisations above have called for the establishment of an ‘Islamic state governed by sharia law’. Of course, he has made these comments under the cover of parliamentary privilege and we call upon him to repeat these claims outside of that, if that is what he truly believes.

    In a General Election year, and noting their dismal opinion poll ratings, it is clear that Gove and the Conservative party want to demonstrate their ‘anti-Muslim’ credentials to head off mass defections to the Reform Party and appeal to a far-right electorate. Defining extremism requires a calm, measured and cross-party approach and should not be used as a political football to target marginalised groups.

    Incentive Scheme for the NHS…

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 14/03/2024 - 12:16am in

    This is a quite incredible decision to issue an Urgent and emergency care capital incentive scheme. The NHS doesn’t need incentives to deliver – its needs the resources to deliver! Additionally a version of the lottery is going to be offered: In addition we are now announcing three other routes through which trusts will be... Read more

    Privatising healthcare leads to worse outcomes

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 13/03/2024 - 11:38pm in

    The link to the pledge tool is here. What needs emphasising is that there were no instances where privatising healthcare improved outcomes. So why then do we privatise healthcare within the NHS? Presumably ideology and the belief that private companies are more efficient (in spite of all the evidence to the contrary) and that the... Read more

    Trams and tides

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 13/03/2024 - 8:20am in

    I was interested in the number of trams in France and here we have the answer. Lots! When Avignon with a population of a mere 92,000 has trams, then it is woefully apparent that in the UK where Leeds with a population of c 600k has none – and indeed is the largest city in... Read more

    ‘The Extremist Islamists are Coming! Sunak Cries Wolf to Criminalise Dissent’

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 13/03/2024 - 3:24am in

    Last week saw an extraordinary piece of political theatre. A lectern placed outside Downing Street led to fevered speculation about a General Election announcement. It was no such thing. Instead, we witnessed one of the most extreme speeches a Prime Minister has ever given.

    Rishi Sunak talked of “Islamic extremists” who were “hostile to our values” and were threatening and undermining democracy itself, adding that “our streets have been hijacked by small groups” who operated through “threats of violence and intimidation”. An apocalyptic picture no less, and one that demanded tougher action from the police and a ‘redoubling’ of support for the discredited Prevent programme.

    Enter Michael Gove, the Communities Secretary, whom we learnt was drawing up proposals for a new definition of extremism. The aim of this definition will be to declare pro-Palestinian and Muslim groups such as the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Muslim Council of Britain and MEND (Muslim Engagement & Development) as ‘extremist’, as well as other ‘disruptors’ such as Extinction Rebellion.

    The new definition’s purpose will be to ban politicians from engaging with these groups. However such plans have been met with opposition, not only from the ‘usual suspects’ such as Amnesty International UK and  Liberty, but from Conservative MPs and Peers also, who are concerned that anti-abortion groups or those opposed to transgender rights will be caught by this definition also. 

    So what is going on here? It is clear that the Government in recent months has been alarmed by the massive displays of overwhelmingly peaceful support for Palestinians coupled with criticism of the UK Government (and the Opposition) for fully supporting the state of Israel committing genocide, ethnic cleansing and war crimes against the Palestinians. In fact it doesn’t get more ‘extreme’ than that.

    It is important to state that this support has come from all quarters of society, including Jewish groups opposed to the actions of the Israeli state. However, rather than defend their actions, they choose to create a ‘straw man’ argument of a threat to democracy from ‘violent extremist Muslim mobs’ as a pretext to crack down on lawful protest and assembly. 

    This is an attempt to distract the public from his failing Government and appeal to right-wing voters as the polls show that the Conservatives are heading for political oblivion at the next General Election with 78% of Britons dissatisfied with the way that the Government is running the country. 

    The current definition of extremism is a ‘vocal or active opposition to fundamental British values’. The new definition proposed  is “the promotion of an ideology based on intolerance hatred or violence that aims to that undermines the rights or freedoms of others.”

    What does this mean? Should we not be ‘intolerant’ of genocide, or ‘hate’ ethnic cleaning or war crimes? Make no mistake, this definition is simply self-serving and aimed at protecting the Government from any kind of criticism or protest, whilst whipping up hatred towards Muslims who dare to speak out by labelling them as ‘Islamist extremists’. It is worth noting that the Government’s own definition of British values as set out in the Prevent Strategy includes “Mutual respect and tolerance of those of different faiths.” So much for tolerance then.

    Indeed we should call out the real extremists here, which are members of the Government and Conservative Party. Recent weeks have shown the Conservative Party has sunk to new depths of racism and Islamophobia.

    Former Home Secretary Suella Braverman claimed that “Islamists” were in charge of Britain,  and then Lee Anderson, former Deputy Chair of the Conservative Party waded in with a bizarre claim that “Islamists” were controlling Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, which was too much even for Sunak, who suspending him from the party, provoking a backlash in support of Anderson.  So who are these ‘Islamists’? This has now simply become a term to describe any Muslim individuals or groups who are critical of the Government. 

    But what Sunak, Gove and the Conservatives are doing is not a minor political side-show, it threatens the very fabric of our democratic society as it seeks to criminalise lawful dissent and criticism of the Government. We must come together to oppose this new definition.

    The Political Extremists Embraced by Rishi Sunak

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 12/03/2024 - 9:32pm in

    Earlier this month the Prime Minister stood behind a lectern on Downing Street and declared his opposition to political hate and extremism of all kinds, saying that it meant “MPs do not feel safe in their homes”.

    Calling for the nation to unite against political hatred, he added that, “The time has now come for us all to stand together to combat the forces of division”.

    Fast forward two weeks and the party is not just tolerating such forces of division, but actively welcoming money from someone who has engaged in it.

    The revelation that the Conservative party’s biggest ever donor called for Diane Abbott to be shot, while saying that Britain’s first black female MP made people “want to hate all black women” is a deeply shameful moment in British politics.

    However, even more shameful has been the Conservative party’s reaction to it.

    Asked this morning whether the party should hand back the £10 million Frank Hester gave to them last year, the Energy Minister Graham Stuart told broadcasters that it would be wrong for the businessman to be “cancelled” for his comments, and that the party should “welcome” donations such as Hester’s.

    He was later joined by the Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride, who told Sky News that "I don't think what [Hester] was saying was a gender based or race based comment", before insisting that everyone needed to “move on” from the comments.

    A spokesman for the party was similarly flippant, suggesting that while Hester’s vile comments about Abbott may have been “rude” they were not related to Abbott’s “gender” or “skin colour”.

    It is not clear how the party can justify saying that calling for a black women to be shot, because her very existence makes people want to hate all black women, is not "gender based or race based".

    However, the overall message given by the party’s defence of Hester is overwhelmingly clear. 

    This defence, like the party’s initial attempt to defend Lee Anderson’s comments about Sadiq Khan, shows that when it comes to racism, hate and extremism, the party is only truly opposed to it when it is conducted by someone who they can view as a political opponent.

    When it is instead conducted by one of their own, and particularly when it is conducted by someone who has donated millions of pounds to their party, then it can be entirely tolerated and even condoned.

    Such tolerance does not always hold forever. The party was eventually forced to buckle on Anderson’ and they may ultimately have to do the same with Hester.

    But the trend here is undeniable Whether it’s defending the former Home Secretary Suella Braverman for labelling refugees an “invasion”, or falsely suggesting that child grooming gangs were “almost all” British Pakistanis, or whether it's backing Lee Anderson for telling asylum seekers to “f*** off back to France”, or backing Liz Truss for standing by Steve Bannon as he praises Tommy Robinson, the Conservative Party and Rishi Sunak appear to have a huge amount of tolerance for racism and political extremism, just as long as the individuals engaging in it are seen as being part of their own team.

    Forces of Division

    Later this week Michael Gove is expected to announce plans for the party to expand the official definition of “extremism” while saying that certain individuals and groups should have no place in public life.

    The announcement, which follows Sunak’s own speech on the subject, could reportedly encompass such representative community groups as the Muslim Council of Britain, who would have their future right to engage with the Government removed.

    The plan has raised alarm bells with campaigners and human rights groups, who believe it could be used to delegitimise and ostracise those engaging in non-criminal acts of dissent.

    Yet while the Conservatives appear so keen to label anyone they disagree with as “extremists”, the lesson from recent weeks is that they are far less willing to turn a similar spotlight on either themselves, or those who fund and support them.

    Remotivating the second most depressed country in the world

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 12/03/2024 - 10:52am in

    It seems that, according to US based Sapien Labs and reported in Business Today the UK is now supposed to be the second most depressed country in the world. Unsurprising, I suggest when the government we have is as it is. A functioning economy needs hope above all, which motivates and gives aims – and... Read more

    Downing Street Backtracks on Appointing its Chosen Anti-Muslim Hatred Advisor Who Suppressed Conservative Neo-Nazi Ties – After Byline Times’ Inquiries

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 10/03/2024 - 10:45am in

    The Government abruptly reversed plans to appoint a former government-funded contractor as a new Independent Advisor on Anti-Muslim Hatred after receiving notice of a Byline Times investigation exposing how he shielded Conservatives from scrutiny over ties to racist far-right extremists.

    Senior ministers in Rishi Sunak’s Cabinet planned to announce the appointment of Fiyaz Mughal, founder and former director of Tell MAMA ('Measuring Anti Muslim Attacks’) on Monday.

    The organisation has received a total of £7 million in funding from the Government since 2012.

    However, high-level sources confirmed to Byline Times that Downing Street suddenly cancelled Mughal's appointment following this newspaper's inquiries to the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC).

    On Friday 8 March, the Government was given the opportunity to comment on Byline Times’ story that Mughal had suppressed a Tell MAMA-funded report exposing Conservative Party relationships with anti-Muslim and antisemitic political parties tied to neo-Nazi networks.

    Later that day, a Government spokesperson responded with the following statement: "I would point you back to the minister’s words in the House: 'We plan to appoint a new independent advisor on anti-Muslim hatred, and we will update the House shortly'."

    But, approximately an hour after sending this statement, Downing Street blocked Mughal's appointment, Byline Times can exclusively reveal.

    Sources confirm that No. 10 was "desperately scrambling" to shortlist more credible alternative candidates for the appointment that could be announced at short notice in advance of a raft of other announcements on extremism targeted largely at Muslim communities and anti-war protestors.

    Although on Friday Downing Street was adamant that it could not appoint Mughal, sources told Byline Times that it is not clear whether the role will be replaced and, if so, who with.

    This evening, the Daily Mail reported that Mughal quit the role before it had started because of "attacks from both the far-right and Islamists". The newspaper said it was an "embarrassing blow for Communities Secretary Michael Gove".

    Mughal was due to replace a role previously played by Imam Qari Asim, who in 2019 was appointed by the Government as an Independent Advisor on tackling Islamophobia. Asim was removed from that position in 2022 without being replaced.

    “I was neither given an office nor any resources to undertake any work to define Islamophobia," Asim told Byline Times. "I couldn’t even get the terms of reference for my work from the Government.

    "I was very clear that Islamophobia is not about sanctioning any critique of the faith Islam, but rather about protecting Muslims who are intimidated, discriminated, abused and even assaulted, simply because of their faith.”

    An Alarming Investigation

    In 2012, Fiyaz Mughal founded and launched Tell MAMA as a project run by his other organisation, Faith Matters, which is registered as a community interest company. Both projects have received funding from the Government.

    Since 2012, Tell MAMA has received more than £6 million from the Government. It is receiving an extra £1 million this year.

    From 2016 to 2018, it received more than £225,000 from the Home Office’s 'Building a Stronger Britain Together’ programme run by the Office for Counter Extremism.

    In February 2016, on behalf of Tell MAMA, Mughal used some of this funding to commission me to conduct an investigation into far-right movements in the UK and Europe involved in anti-Muslim hatred. The Tell MAMA-funded investigation was due to be published as a four-part series on its website.

    I delivered the 15,000-word draft report of the investigation in May 2016. The material was subsequently edited and reviewed by Tell MAMA staff and Mughal agreed that the series would be published both online and as a single report which could be sent to the media.

    I was so alarmed by my findings that when I had submitted the first draft to Tell MAMA, I had suggested we work to ensure that Muslim and Jewish communities were brought together to understand how the mainstreaming of the far-right is endangering both.

    “I think the Board of Jewish Deputies and Community Security Trust, as well as relevant agencies in the US and EU, would be keenly interested in (and rightly alarmed by) these findings,” I wrote to Mughal.

    In an email on 11 May, he wrote: “Brilliant on all counts Nafeez – we also want to do more with you in the future if that is okay – but let’s make this a huge bang and I will also send you a press hook for you to feed into so that we can get to nationals."

    My findings were shocking.

    By tracing the trans-Atlantic connections and historical heritage of far-right political parties across Europe, I discovered that the vast majority of parties rising up in the polls had explicit Nazi sympathies and affiliations, and often even little-understood Nazi heritage.

    Many of these parties campaigned on a footing of loudly denouncing antisemitism and publicly distancing themselves from Nazism. Yet my investigation had exposed their direct ties with active neo-Nazi networks.

    These were political parties that were becoming increasingly mainstream – including the German AfD, the Austrian FPO, Geert Wilders’ PVV, the Belgian Vlaams Belang (VB) Party, the Danish Peoples Party (DPP), Le Pen's NF, Nigel Farage’s UKIP, and the True Finns (PS).

    Other political parties with Nazi heritage or sympathies my investigation exposed, including Holocaust denial and antisemitism, were Lega Nord in Italy, MS5 in Italy, the Sweden Democrats, the Czech Party of Free Citizens, and Poland’s Congress of the New Right.

    Many of these political parties were, however, increasingly engaged in anti-Muslim hatred and prejudice. My investigation showed that these political networks were making deliberate efforts to rebrand themselves by distancing from their Nazi heritage. They wanted to rehabilitate their influence on the centre-right.

    The Striking Omission

    On 7 June 2016, Mughal emailed me asking if we could meet me in person. A final version of my report had been edited and approved by Tell MAMA staff. We met at King's Cross station a few days later.

    After congratulating me again on the investigation, Mughal’s enthusiasm for the project appeared to have dipped. He did not want to publish the second part of the series titled "The Conservative Party aided and abetted German fascists with Nazi roots".

    Mughal explained to me that it wasn’t because he didn’t believe the findings were not accurate or important. He said that if Tell MAMA published them, it would create serious problems for his relationship with the Government and the organisation's funding.

    His solution was for Tell MAMA to publish the series except the section highlighting Conservative far-right ties.

    Meanwhile, my own platform, INSURGE intelligence, could publish the entire investigation with an acknowledgement of Tell MAMA’s role in commissioning the project.

    Mughal insisted that he was fully behind the project and we discussed a full report launch in Parliament as well as a social media campaign to raise awareness. I had little choice but to agree and did not feel I couldn force him to publish the material on the Conservative Party.

    Mere weeks later, on 16 June, Labour MP Jo Cox was murdered by a far-right activist who had been a long time supporter of the neo-Nazi National Alliance. Cox had been due to launch Tell MAMA’s annual report in Parliament later that month.

    Conservatives and the Far-Right

    Four days later, on 20 June, my full Tell MAMA reportReturn of the Reich: Mapping the Global Resurgence of Far Right Power – was published on INSURGE with a dedication to Jo Cox and her family, approved by Fiyaz Mughal. Simultaneously, Tell MAMA published part one of the investigation on its website.

    But ultimately, Tell MAMA not only refused to publish the section identifying the Conservative Party’s ties to neo-Nazi networks in Germany, it also failed to publish the entirety of the rest of my report mapping out the anti-Muslim, neo-Nazi and antisemitic sympathies of wider far-right groups across Europe – many of whom were working directly with the Conservative Party and right-wing groups in the US who supported Donald Trump.

    The sections of my investigation suppressed by Tell MAMA demonstrated that the Conservative Party was working closely with a number of far-right parties in Europe harbouring the same toxic ideology that had inspired Jo Cox’s murderer.

    The Conservative Party was leading the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) bloc of political parties in the European Parliament. But working under it at that time were three parties each with direct ties to racist and neo-Nazi groups: the Alternative for Germany (AfD), Danish People’s Party (DPP), and the True Finns which later rebranded as the Finns Party.

    My investigation documented how the AfD was not merely an anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim party – but one with direct Nazi heritage.

    Several AfD founders and leaders, my investigation revealed, were associates of Alfred Dregger – a Nazi military veteran who, despite renouncing his membership of the Nazi Party, would go on to campaign for the release of Nazi war criminal Ferdinand Hugo aus der Fünten.

    Also during the Conservative leadership of the ECR, the AfD partnered with Pegida – the far-right street protest movement, the main organisers of which were neo-Nazis including convicted terrorists.

    But it wasn’t just the AfD.

    From 2014 to 2016, the vice chair and chief whip of the ECR, then working closely with Conservative MEPs Syed Kamall and Daniel Hannan, was Morten Messerschmidt of the Danish People’s Party.

    Messerschmidt was a convicted racist. The year he won his seat in the European Parliament, he conducted an interview with notorious hate blog Gates of Vienna, which has been described by British MPs as “a training manual for anti-Muslim paramilitaries”.

    Among the Gates of Vienna’s posts are detailed prescriptions for anti-Muslim paramilitary operations during a race war within Europe between Muslims and their neighbours, and even "a guide to amateur bomb-making".

    In 2015, anti-fascist charity Hope Not Hate found alarming evidence that the Gates of Vienna blog was linked to a far-right plot to “incite a violent backlash from British Muslims, leading to serious disorder between Muslim and non-Muslim communities”.

    No wonder the convicted neo-Nazi terrorist Anders Behring Breivik, who massacred 77 people in July 2011, cited the Gates of Vienna blog 86 times in his manifesto.

    Messerschmidt was not an aberration in his party. In 1997, then DPP leader Pia Kjærsgaard (who in 2013 became the party’s official “values” spokesperson), told a party annual meeting: “In the Danish People’s Party, we do not hide the fact we are against having Denmark turned into a multi-ethnic society.”

    Another prominent colleague of the Conservative Party in the ECR since 2014 was Jussi Halla-aho, a Finns Party MEP who, like Messerschmidt, is also a convicted racist. He had distinguished himself in Finland by using his personal blog to wish “rape on ‘green-left’ women”, describe Islam as a “paedophile religion”, and advocate violence as “a very undervalued method of solving problems”.

    At the time of my report, he was also a member of Suomen Sisu (‘Finnish Power’), the founding policy statement of which advocated a white supremacist ideology comparable to that of the Ku Klux Klan and American Nazi Party: “Peoples of different nationalities shouldn’t be mixed to destroy historically developed cultures by replacing them with a global subculture.”

    Halla-aho was not alone. Three other Finns Party MPs were members of Suomen Sisu, described by Finnish newspaper Länsiväylä as a “Nazi spirited” organisation.

    My investigation further documented evidence of the Finns Party’s alliance with other neo-Nazi groups, such as the Finnish National Resistance Front.

    Another vice chair of the ECR working with under the Conservative Party from 2014 was Independent Greeks MEP Notis Marias. The Independent Greeks had a track record of grotesque antisemitism during his tenure.

    In December 2014, for instance, the party's founding leader blamed the country's chronic tax evasion problem on "the Jews". In August that year, Marias also backed a notorious joint initiative with the Italian Five Star Movement calling for the children of immigrants to be denied citizenship – a proposal also supported by Greece's neo-Nazi Golden Dawn.

    The Home Office Intervention

    Tell MAMA did not publish, amplify or campaign on any of the findings revealed in my investigation, which it had commissioned. There was no report launch, no social media campaign, and no press coverage.

    On 1 August 2016, I received a phone call from a furious Fiyaz Mughal.

    He said he had just spoken to Sabin Khan, who was then the Deputy Director of the Research, Information and Communications Unit in the Home Office’s Organisation for Security and Counter-Terrorism.

    Mughal said that Khan had threatened to cut off the Home Office’s funding to Tell MAMA due to the fact that it was working with me. She had specifically mentioned that my work was critical of the Government's counter-extremism Prevent strategy. If Mughal continued to work with me, he had been told, it would not just be Home Office funding that was withdrawn, but funding from departments across government.

    The next day, I wrote directly to Khan about these threats and my apparent blacklisting by the Government.

    “I recently reported… on the Home Secretary’s alarming links with the Henry Jackson Society (HJS), whose associate director, Douglas Murray, is an extremist who has said some absolutely appalling things about Muslims verging on open racism," I wrote. "As a consequence of my reporting, Amber Rudd disassociated herself from HJS for the first time in years. Is it the case that the Government wants Tell MAMA to disassociate itself from me because of my critical journalism exposing government policy failures?

    "I am particularly alarmed by the Government’s seeming lack of interest in the content of my work for Tell MAMA… [which] demonstrates a direct correlation between the rise of anti-Muslim hatred and antisemitic bigotry, as a result of an unprecedented resurgence of political groups with neo-Nazi heritage and affiliations.

    "Part of my findings include alarming evidence that many of these neo-Nazi parties have indeed been courted and had direct affiliations to the Conservative Party, through various groups in the European Parliament. Is the Home Office’s concern for Tell MAMA’s relationship with me related to the fact that my Tell MAMA report documented in some detail disturbing connections between far-right extremists and the British Government?”

    Khan replied to my email five days later, copying in her superior, Peter Wilson. She did not deny any of Mughal's allegations.

    “I can assure you that your mail has received my full attention," she wrote. "However, you will understand that my conversation with Mr Mughal was a private one and you will appreciate that I cannot comment on such a conversation. In the circumstances I cannot say anymore.”

    On 29 November that year, I made a formal complaint to the Home Office. The Home Office breached its own complaints procedure and did not even acknowledge, let alone respond, to my complaint. This was despite its commitment to responding within 20 working days or providing an explanation if a complaint is not upheld.

    Apparently in compliance with Khan’s demand, Tell MAMA did not commission me again.

    'A Rubber-Stamp Exercise'

    In 2019, after 14 Conservative members were suspended due to anti-Muslim bigotry, Fiyaz Mughal did eventually ‘speak out’. He wrote an op-ed in the Guardian describing how he had met senior Tory leaders and found most of them receptive to the idea of taking action internally, but that they were reluctant to “ask for help” – which he was offering in the form of "support, training and systems tests".

    Conspicuously missing from his article was any mention of the findings of the Tell MAMA investigation that his organisation had commissioned and funded in 2016, demonstrating that the Conservative Party’s problem with racist, anti-Muslim and antisemitic bigotry went far deeper than he was willing to acknowledge.

    The Government’s recent plan – aborted at the last minute – to appoint Fiyaz Mughal as its point-man on anti-Muslim bigotry raises a simple issue.

    This is a man who quashed the most critical findings of his organisation’s own investigation into the Conservative Party’s ties with some of the most virulent anti-Muslim and antisemitic political networks in Europe. He apparently did so over fears of repercussions for his own organisation – fears which turned out not to be unfounded.

    Since then, he has continued to maintain a staunch silence on how the Conservative Party fostered in the European Parliament racist politicians with live relationships with neo-Nazis.

    Imam Qari Asim, who previously held the role of Independent Advisor to tackle Islamophobia, told Byline Times: “Anyone appointed by the Government to define Islamophobia or anti-Muslim hatred must be impartial, credible and grounded in Muslim communities. Any work done to define ‘anti-Muslim hatred’ must build on the work already undertaken. It must have broad consensus amongst British Muslims. Any such work must not be seen as a rubber-stamp exercise to push certain views held by a small group of people in political corridors.”

    Fiyaz Mughal, Tell MAMA, and Downing Street did not respond to Byline Times’ requests for comment.

    Jewish Londoners Slam Government Advisor’s ‘No-Go Zone’ Claim About Pro-Palestine Marches

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/03/2024 - 4:10am in

    Many Jewish Londoners have slapped down a Government advisor’s claim that London is now a “no-go zone for Jews” during the weekly pro-Palestine marches. 

    Calling for tougher action against the Palestine protests, Government anti-extremism tsar Robin Simcox told the Telegraph: “We will not have become an authoritarian state if London is no longer permitted to be turned into a no-go zone for Jews every weekend... All these things and more have become normalised in the UK."

    His comments dominated the paper’s Friday front page and led the BBC's agenda. 

    BBC Radio 4 reported that Simcox – a self-described ‘neoconservative’ – declined to appear on the show on Friday morning to answer questions about his claim.

    Responding to his comments, Green London Assembly Member Zack Polanski, who is Jewish, replied: “I've been on plenty of Palestine marches – and spoken at them– and as a Jewish person have felt completely safe. Whilst I don't doubt there are fearful people in our Jewish communities, headlines like this which serve to stoke fear and tension, are utterly irresponsible.”

    Polanski told Byline Times that he has worked closely with Jewish organisations such as Na'mod, which marches for a ceasefire and Palestinian human rights.

    “[They] are bringing Jewish voices against the occupation together and have been excellent in demonstrating the growing Jewish movement that is utterly horrified by what we're seeing unfold in Gaza,” he said.

    “I've been and spoken at their rallies also and there's an absolute feeling of what else can we do now to make a ceasefire happen when politicians from the two old parties are looking away?

    "It feels like stoking up stories of no-go zones are a huge distraction from our complicity in the collective punishment of the Palestinian people."

    Simcox previously worked for the Henry Jackson Society think tank.

    One of its founders, Matthew Jamison, wrote in 2017 that he was ashamed of his involvement and that it had allegedly become “a far-right, deeply anti-Muslim, racist... propaganda outfit to smear other cultures, religions and ethnic groups". Jamison and organisations, such as the Muslim Council of Britain, have claimed that the HJS has “relentlessly demonise[s] Muslims and Islam" – a claim the group denies. 

    Another Jewish Londoner, Rachell Penn, said she was “so sick to death of this idea that Jews think in a singular way”. 

    “From ultra orthodox to secular, and from right-wing to left-wing, we have so many different views, yet are patronised in the media as being incapable of different views.

    "I march with  the Jewish bloc some weeks, and the very warm welcome it gets week in and week out is heart-warming. This is how peace will be achieved, not this culture war bullsh*t. Once again Jews are being used as a political football by politicians."

    Ben Samuel, a Jewish Londoner from Edgware, has been in central London regularly to take part in the marches. He has marched with the Jewish bloc, in all weathers. 

    While he says he’s witnessed a change in London since the 7 October attacks, and rising fears over security, he has felt safe at the marches. 

    “I have monitored the situation closely by talking with Jewish neighbours and those at my synagogue," he told Byline Times. "In fact, synagogue has been a no-go zone for my black Jewish friend… The police presence has made the situation intolerable.”

    He said another Jewish friend has felt uncomfortable at the atmosphere within her synagogue since October.

    “At the end of [a] service the decision was made to sing Hatikvah, the national anthem of Israel," he added. "Just the whole atmosphere made her uncomfortable so she bravely [spoke] at the Bimah (pulpit), acknowledging Palestine in her talk. It's the first time I've ever heard the P word in that communal setting."

    Samuel says he has been taken off door duty for his synagogue since October – he believes it may have been triggered by his pro-Palestine views. 

    And while he has witnessed antisemitism and protest signs which “crassly reference the Holocaust”, media portrayals of the Palestine demonstrations do not present “the full picture”.

    “I think it's vital that voices like mine are represented in the media reports,” he added. Samuel will continue to join the Jewish Bloc at the pro-ceasefire protests. 

    Green activist Lesley Grahame, based in Norwich, said: “I once hid my matzos in a shopping trolley in case anyone associated me with the massacres. Nobody did. I support the ceasefire marches in Norwich and London. Yes, it's uncomfortable, but nothing to the life/death/grief/terror in the remains of Gaza.”

    Matthew Butcher, a Jewish Londoner and progressive activist, said: “I am [Jewish] and it's just extraordinarily irresponsible for the Government advisor to say this. I'll be in central London feeling just fine I'd say.”

    Non-profit policy worker James Ingram argued that Jews appeared to be “useful” to Simcox’s worldview and this his comments were "damaging and exclusionary”.

    However, another Jewish London, Nicole Lampert, said she and her Jewish family were fearful on Saturdays “when there are people with antisemitic placards and people singing for the destruction of the only Jewish state”.

    “I note there are no calls for peace or the return of the hostages on these demos (apart from the Jewish bloc),” she added. 

    “Jewish people were already at a low level of fear before all of this because of the multiple threats against us. We don’t have security guards outside our schools, nurseries and synagogues for fun but because of all the death threats – and we’ve seen in France, Belgium etc. how these attacks will be carried out. That also has to be taken into account."

    Writer Tanya Gold said the claim that London was a “no-go zone” was “absurd”, but added that certain parts of the marches – “anywhere where hostage posters are repeatedly defaced – feel threatening to Jews who are not anti-Zionist: i.e., most of us”.

    Gold said that, while the marches haven’t erupted into violence and probably won't, “the demonisation of Israel – and with it, Jews who don't denounce Israel – feels appallingly familiar. In the mediaeval period, Jews were god-killers, demonic beings, and inhuman. You can hear very clear echoes of that language now. That is what terrifies us, and I think that fear is rational.”

    Responding to Byline Times’ call for views on Simcox's comments, Francis Freeman claimed that some Jewish friends “no longer go on the marches because of the increase in antisemitic hate”.

    Another Jewish respondent, Rebecca Trenner, added: “I don't go into [central] London on Saturdays because I feel threatened. I won't take my children to central London on protest days – many friends agree.”

    Rabbi Zvi Solomons, who lives in Reading and often comes to London, said he has faced antisemitic behaviour (though not necessarily on the marches). He told Byline Times: “I am street savvy and have had two or three occasions when a young man has approached me from behind, in a menacing manner, whilst I’m walking down the road. They saw my kippa. I turned to avoid the situation becoming threatening to me."

    Do you have a story that needs highlighting? Get in touch by emailing josiah@bylinetimes.com

    Welcome to your declining income and living standard…

    Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/03/2024 - 10:47am in

    Impossible to add much, except of course that Sunak’s “delivering for the British people” takes on a whole new meaning…... Read more

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