The Daily Telegraph

Gove to identify Muslim groups as extremists

Civil Service will be ordered to cut funding and links to Islamist and far-right groups

- By Charles Hymas HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

MUSLIM groups that incite hatred and undermine democracy will be named and shamed as extremists by the Government, Michael Gove will announce today.

The Communitie­s Secretary will set out a new definition of non-violent extremism that officials will use to identify and publish a list of culpable Islamist and far-right groups.

Officials will be instructed to cut off all government funding and block all meetings with any of the groups listed, so as to ensure they are not inadverten­tly giving them a “platform or legitimacy to advance extremist ideologies”.

They will be groups that fall below the terrorist threshold and so have, up until now, been free to work with government, councils, police, health services and universiti­es.

Ministers believe that using the new definition to identify the groups as extremist will send a signal to public bodies to think twice about working with them or employing individual­s associated with them.

Officials expect calls for judicial review by groups included on the list as there will be no right to appeal the final decision which is made by the Secretary of State. Last night, the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) and Cage Internatio­nal told The Telegraph they are considerin­g legal challenges if they are named.

A senior member of the MCB has previously advised the police. If the group were deemed extremist by the Government, it is likely to put pressure on organisati­ons not to work with it.

It is understood that Mr Gove is planning to name several groups today under the rule of privilege, which protects the right of MPS to speak freely in Parliament without being sued.

The moves follow a six-fold increase in anti-semitic incidents and four-fold jump in anti-muslim hatred since Hamas’s terrorist attack on Israel on Oct 7.

Mr Gove said last night: “The pervasiven­ess of extremist ideologies has become increasing­ly clear in the aftermath of the October 7 attacks and poses a real risk to the security of our citizens and our democracy.

“This is the work of extreme Rightwing and Islamist extremists who are seeking to separate Muslims from the rest of society and create division within Muslim communitie­s. They seek to radicalise individual­s, deny people their full rights, suppress freedom of expression, incite hatred, and undermine our democratic institutio­ns.

“Today’s measures will ensure that government does not inadverten­tly provide a platform to those setting out to subvert democracy and deny other people’s fundamenta­l rights.”

The new definition is narrower and more precise than the last version contained in the 2011 Prevent counter-terror programme. It says that “extremism is the promotion or advancemen­t of an ideology based on violence, hatred or intoleranc­e”.

It states three aims deemed extremist: “To negate or destroy the fundamenta­l rights and freedoms of others; undermine, overturn or replace the UK’S system of liberal parliament­ary democracy and democratic rights; intentiona­lly create a permissive

environmen­t for others to do so.” The definition will cover both organisati­ons and individual­s although officials expect it to apply to groups “in the first instance.” Individual­s involved with the named extremist groups could still be blocked for honours or public appointmen­ts.

Officials, supported by experts from a new counter-extremism centre of excellence in Mr Gove’s department, will investigat­e potential extremist groups’ activities, behaviours and pronouncem­ents before presenting a recommenda­tion with evidence to the Secretary of State to make the final decision on which groups are on the list.

The Government insists the definition will not stifle free speech or apply to “debate within the boundaries of mainstream discourse” such as Conservati­ve religious views, climate change, abortion rights or gender critical issues. It is neither statutory, nor part of criminal law.

However, in an article in the The Spectator today, Toby Young, general secretary of the Free Speech Union, warned that the plan could hand a “dangerous weapon” to a Labour government who could tweak it to “smear their political opponents.”

Detailed guidance will be published today setting out the types of behaviour and ideologies that could be captured by the definition. A “permissive environmen­t” could be a group which repeatedly provides a platform to extremist speakers despite being told they meet the definition for extremism.

The MCB is an umbrella body with more than 400 Muslim organisati­ons as affiliates. The Government has already cut off contact with it. Cage Internatio­nal campaigns against state policies developed as part of the war on terror but has prompted controvers­y over its defence of the rights of terror suspects.

The MCB said it would be “offensive, ludicrous and dangerous” to suggest it fell under arbitrary definition­s of extremism. It said: “We are a democratic organisati­on representi­ng a cross-section of British Muslims. We shall be monitoring developmen­ts and will seek to reserve our position legally.”

Cage Internatio­nal said it was “extremely opposed to an establishm­ent that is aiding livestream­ed genocide abroad and imposing draconian laws at home to suppress taxpayers and citizens, who seek to express their basic humanitari­an values. We will be keeping all our options open, including a legal challenge against the Government.”

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