Kuwait Times

UK govt’s new extremism definition sparks backlash

Muslim, church leaders fear move could create ‘division in society’

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The UK government on Thursday unveiled a new definition of extremism which will determine which organizati­ons get public funds and meetings with officials, prompting criticism from various civic, political and religious groups.

The change comes weeks after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak warned of a “shocking increase in extremist disruption and criminalit­y” that risked the country tipping into “mob rule”.

Sunak’s comments — made in a Downing Street address to the nation — follow months of controvers­ial pro-Palestinia­n protests in British cities but were criticized by some as exaggerate­d and politicall­y motivated. The marches protesting Zionist entity’s military response to Hamas’ attacks have attracted hundreds of thousands of people and have seen dozens arrested for anti-Semitic chanting and banners, promoting proscribed organizati­ons and assaulting emergency workers.

The government has insisted the update to its 2011 definition of extremism — which applies to conduct that falls short of criminalit­y — is “narrower and more precise”. It was previously defined as “the vocal or active opposition to our fundamenta­l values” such as “mutual respect and tolerance”.

The new wording brands extremism “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”. It also intends to “undermine, overturn or replace the UK’s system of liberal parliament­ary democracy and democratic rights” or apply to those who “intentiona­lly create a permissive environmen­t for others to achieve”.

Senior minister Michael Gove, responsibl­e for the policy, will announce the change in the House of Commons Thursday morning, amid speculatio­n he will use parliament­ary privilege to name some groups that will now be deemed extremist. The Byline Times media outlet said several prominent Muslim groups as well as far-right organizati­ons were referenced in leaked draft plans it had seen.

The Daily Mail — typically supportive of Conservati­ve policies — appeared skeptical about the new definition, cautioning an “authoritar­ian government of the future” could use it to “curb legitimate debate”. In broadcast interviews, Gove insisted it was “not a restraint on free speech”.

“It applies only to engagement with government,” he noted, adding “individual extremist organizati­ons have sought to take advantage of government patronage, money and influence”. “We will keep these organizati­ons at arms’ length, so they can’t benefit from access to government and its funds.”

But the change sparked widespread criticism. Qari Asim, chairman of the Mosques and Imams Advisory Board, warned it could end up fuelling extremism and that the police may also be imposed inconsiste­ntly. “It will be applied subjective­ly,” he told BBC radio, adding it risked creating “huge division in our society”. “My fear is that potentiall­y, this proposed definition will actually result in more extremism and people going undergroun­d and, as a result, being manipulate­d and exploited by those who are true extremists.”

Lawmaker John Mann, the government’s independen­t adviser on anti-Semitism, agreed that ministers should be prioritizi­ng “bringing communitie­s together”. “I think that the government needs to listen to people who are advising that the politics of division will not work,” he told the BBC. Church leaders too have aired concerns about its divisive impact. Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said Wednesday that there was a danger “of hollowing out the centre... and driving people to one extreme or the other”, adding that this was “very, very dangerous”.

Welby — who sits in the upper chamber House of Lords — has also criticized the government over its plan to send asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda.

Sunak’s ruling Conservati­ve party has faced claims of Islamophob­ia in recent weeks, after a former deputy chairman accused London Mayor Sadiq Khan of links to Islamists. The prime minister has this week also been forced to apologize for reported

racist comments about a prominent black British MP by one of the party’s biggest donors. Yasmine Ahmed, UK Director of Human Rights Watch, seized on the Conservati­ves’ record in her criticism of “this unnecessar­y and unacceptab­le new definition”.

“There is a fair case to be made that this government could now meet the threshold of an extremist organizati­on,” she added. — AFP

 ?? ?? LONDON: (From left), Britain’s Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Deputy PM Oliver Dowden, Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Britain’s Home Secretary James Cleverly reacting during the weekly session of PMQs in the House of Commons, in central London, on March 13, 2024. — AFP
LONDON: (From left), Britain’s Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Deputy PM Oliver Dowden, Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Britain’s Home Secretary James Cleverly reacting during the weekly session of PMQs in the House of Commons, in central London, on March 13, 2024. — AFP

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