The Mail on Sunday

Muslim leader sues Priti for libel over war crimes report

- By Sarah Limbrick

A BRITISH Muslim leader facing the death penalty in Bangladesh for alleged war crimes is suing Home Secretary Priti Patel for £60,000 in libel damages.

Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, 71, who strenuousl­y denies claims linking him to the killing of proindepen­dence activists during the country’s civil war in the 1970s, alleges that he was defamed in a Home Office report last year.

The lawsuit says the Challengin­g Hateful Extremism document by the Commission for Countering Extremism was shared on the Home Office’s Twitter account, which has almost one million followers, and retweeted by Ms Patel and others – i ncluding BBC journalist Mishal Husain and the human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell.

Mr Mueen-Uddin, who helped found the Muslim Council of Great Britain and was pictured in 2003 with Prince Charles while vice-chairman of the East London Mosque, alleges the report libelled him by stating that he was responsibl­e for serious criminal violence, including crimes against humanity, during the Bangladesh­i war of independen­ce in 1971.

The father- of- four, who lives in North London, insists he has not committed war crimes, is not a link between the perpetrato­rs of the 1971 violence and the leadership of the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party’s UK branch and is not and never has been a senior leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami political group.

Seven years ago, Mr Mueen-Uddin was convicted in his absence of crimes against humanity for allegedly leading a militia said to have killed 18 intellectu­als while it fought the split from Pakistan.

He was sentenced t o hang by the Internatio­nal Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh.

But he says the tribunal has been widely condemned and discredite­d, citing Liberal Democrat peer Lord Carlile, who described the tribunal as ‘ not fit for purpose’ and the case against Mr Mueen-Uddin as ‘nothing short of farcical’.

I n 2012, The Mail on Sunday revealed that Mr Mueen-Uddin, who at the time had a senior role with the NHS, was facing prosecutio­n by the tribunal which is based in Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka.

His writ, submitted to the High

Court last month, also claims that the Challengin­g Hateful Extremism report breached European data protection regulation­s and t hat his personal informatio­n was unlawfully used.

The report, originally published in October last year, remained on the Government’s website until March 20 after the Commission initially dismissed Mr Mueen-Uddin’s complaint. It later removed references to him and deleted his personal data.

Mr Mueen-Uddin, who fled Bangladesh after the war and gained British citizenshi­p, claims the report’s publicatio­n caused him severe distress and embarrassm­ent which was aggravated by the Commission’s failure to contact him before publishing the allegation­s.

He says he suffered further when the Home Secretary’s lawyers wrote to him in February, suggesting it was ‘fanciful’ that the report had seriously harmed his reputation.

A H o me O f f i c e s p o k e s ma n said: ‘This relates to claims made within a report published by the Independen­t Commission for Countering Extremism.

‘However, given the Home Office is the sponsoring department for the commission, we are unable to comment further while legal proceeding­s are ongoing.’

 ??  ?? SEVERE DISTRESS: Mr Mueen-Uddin chatting to the Prince of Wales in 2003
SEVERE DISTRESS: Mr Mueen-Uddin chatting to the Prince of Wales in 2003

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