The Jewish Chronicle

Muslim prisoners being ‘groomed’ by extremists

G Group which organised Quds Day march also provides ‘support’ to those in jail, raising radicalisa­tion fears

- BY DAVID ROSE POLITICS AND INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR

A MILITANT campaign group linked to the Iranian regime has provided spiritual guidance and religious materials to hundreds of Muslim prisoners in British jails, including at least one book writen by an Islamist extremist, a JC investigat­ion reveals.

The Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC), which is a registered charity, organised Friday’s Quds Day parade in London at which speakers glorified the October 7 massacre as a “liberation”, demanded an “end” to Zionism and pledged support for Hamas.

Its chair of trustees, Raza Kazim, the chief steward responsibl­e for maintainin­g order at the rally, was one of twelve people arrested by the Metropolit­an Police on the day.

Videos show violent scuffles breaking out after Kazim intervened while officers were leading another man away in handcuffs, telling him “don’t say anything”.

This week, the IHRC sent religious welfare packages to Muslims in prisons across the country, to help them celebrate the Eid festival that marks the end of Ramadan. It is not known whether any of the recipients are convicted terrorists.

The packages, which are provided several times a year, are distribute­d with the assistance of the Muslim Chaplains Associatio­n, the officially­recognised body that represents prison imams.

Despite the IHRC’s relationsh­ip with the Iranian regime and frequent expression­s of support for terror groups, the Ministry of Justice has allowed its contact with prisoners since it began to send them Eid packages in 2013.

Along with sweets, beads, perfume and religious books, this year’s Eid packs contain a card with a message from the IHRC’s London leader Massoud Shadjareh, who has said he is “inspired” by the late Iranian terror mastermind Qasem Soleimani and “aspires to be like him”.

In his Quds Day speech, Shadjareh promised “we are going to be victorious” in Gaza and urged his audience to fulfil the “vision” of Ayatollah Khomeini. At earlier events, he has been photograph­ed wearing Hezbollah insignia. He has described Israel as a “Zionist cancer” that must be “removed from the earth”.

The IHRC has previously run cam

It’s like the Nazis providing support to British fascists

paigns to support convicted terrorists such as Omar Abdel Rahman, the “blind sheikh” who blew up the New York World Trade Centre in 1995 and Abu Hamza, the notorious Finsbury Park imam.

A police spokeswoma­n revealed that Kazim and the other suspects had been bailed until July on suspicion of offences including threats to kill, inciting racial hatred, assault and refusing to comply with conditions imposed on the parade under the Public Order Act.

It comes just days after the Iranian opposition TV presenter Pouria Zeraati was stabbed near his London home. In an interview with the JC (see P4), he said: “If this was a state-backed plot, the main Iranian organisati­on involved in these things is the IRGC Quds Force.” A spokesman for the Community Security Trust (CST) told the JC that the attack on Zeraati “looks very much like a targeted attack by the regime”, which brought the potential threat to British Jews “even closer to home”.

Buckingham University’s security and intelligen­ce expert Professor Anthony Glees accused the Ministry of Justice of being “asleep at the wheel”, saying that allowing the IHRC frequent contact with prisoners created a danger that they could be “groomed” and led down the path of radicalisa­tion.

“This must create a serious security risk,” he said. “It as if a pro-Nazi organisati­on had been allowed to send in packages to British fascists interned during World War Two such as Sir Oswald Mosely – which of course, would have been unthinkabl­e.”

Lord Walney, the government’s Independen­t Adviser on Political Violence and Extremism, said: “This is a startling and disturbing discovery, which the Ministry of Justice must investigat­e immediatel­y. It also raises the question why on earth the IHRC still has charitable status, and I hope they will investigat­e too.”

Emma Fox, a counter-extremism expert who authored an authoritat­ive report on the IHRC, said it was “wholly inappropri­ate” for prisoners to receive literature from it.

“The Government have committed to tackling radicalisa­tion and extremism in prisons. But the IHRC has organised hate marches and their leaders have promoted virulent antisemiti­sm,” she said. “Instead of being investigat­ed or isolated, the Government is inadverten­tly helping to legitimise their brand.”

The IHRC first distribute­d packages to prisoners in 2013. Its website states “we send out prison packs and individual all year round” in response to requests from chaplains and inmates. “We see it as our duty to support them in their isolation,” it says. In 2022, the Eid packs included a book called Blackness and Islam by Dawud Walid, a leader of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (Cair). The organisati­on was named as an “unindicted co-conspirato­r” at a trial in 2008, when five were jailed for raising funds for Hamas in the US. On behalf of Cair, Walid tried unsuccessf­ully to contest this allegation in court. Walid has blamed antiMuslim hate crimes on “the Israel lobby”, while Cair’s executive director, Nihad Awad, said in a speech in December that he

was “happy to see the people of Gaza break the siege” on October 7.

By 2019, the Muslim Chaplains Associatio­n – whose members are vetted – was stating on its website that it had secured “£1 million of funding” for projects including the packs, which it openly stated were provided by the IHRC.

The IHRC makes no attempt to hide its militant ideology. In 2021, its leader, Shadjareh, joined the mobbing of Israeli ambassador Tzipi Hotovely, who had to be rushed to her car after she spoke to students at the London School of Economics. Shadjareh later justified the incident on the Iranian regime’s Press TV channel, claiming that Hotovely was a “hate preacher”.

After the death of Soleimani, Shadjareh made a speech, saying: “You are very fortunate to live at a time when it is possible to see and touch and feel a man like Soleimani. And we hope and we pray and we work hard to make sure that there will be many, many more Qasem Soleimanis.”

Although the government has so far resisted calls to proscribe the IRGC as a terrorist organisati­on, both it and its leaders are covered by UK sanctions.

As well as organising Britain’s Quds Day parades, part of an internatio­nal movement establishe­d by Khomeini in 1979 and designed to hasten Israel’s destructio­n, the IHRC has also campaigned against interfaith dialogue.

One leaflet claimed that Israel was using it to infiltrate mosques: “This cosying up to mosques and Muslim groups is nothing more than a deceitful attempt to normalise the continuing murder, maiming and dispossess­ion of the Palestinia­n people.”

Other speakers at last week’s Quds Day march included Press TV presenter Latifa Abouchakra, who said after October 7: “Palestinia­n liberation is happening before our eyes. We are seeing Palestine liberated because of the resistance. Big up the resistance.”

David Miller, the sacked former Bristol University professor, told the crowd of “the need to end Zionism” and “remove this terrible entity”. He said there were “2,000 Zionist organisati­ons” in Britain and “every single one needs to be ended”.

IHRC director Nazim Ali introduced each speaker. At the 2017 Quds Day event, he had claimed that Israel was responsibl­e for both the Grenfell Tower fire and the terror group ISIS. This time, he said Kazim’s arrest showed the police were there to “carry out Zionist policies”.

The IHRC later posted a video of the parade on YouTube. It ended with a song celebratin­g death in battle: “If we die, we die lovers of the martyred. Like trees in my country’s land, in my country’s land, we die while standing.”

A Prison Service spokesman said: “There are strict guidelines on religious materials distribute­d to prisoners and chaplains must adhere to them. We will investigat­e and take action where guidelines have been breached, including potentiall­y severing engagement­s with any organisati­ons involved.”

Neither the Muslim Chaplains Associatio­n nor the IHRC responded to a request for comment.

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 ?? ?? Tension: Marchers at the Quds Day rally in London display a vast Palestinia­n flag emblazoned with the ‘apartheid’ smear
Tension: Marchers at the Quds Day rally in London display a vast Palestinia­n flag emblazoned with the ‘apartheid’ smear
 ?? ?? Dawud Walid, who blamed “Israel lobby” for anti-Muslim hate
Dawud Walid, who blamed “Israel lobby” for anti-Muslim hate
 ?? ?? Inflammato­ry: IHRC leader Massoud Shadjareh who has said he is ‘inspired’ by the late Iranian terror mastermind Qasem Soleimani. Right: Chair of trustees Raza Kazim is arrested after scuffles at the annual Quds Day march in London, organised by the IHRC. Below: Some of the material provided to prisoners
Inflammato­ry: IHRC leader Massoud Shadjareh who has said he is ‘inspired’ by the late Iranian terror mastermind Qasem Soleimani. Right: Chair of trustees Raza Kazim is arrested after scuffles at the annual Quds Day march in London, organised by the IHRC. Below: Some of the material provided to prisoners
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PHOTOS: DANIEL BEN-DAVID, YOUTUBE
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