Yorkshire Post

Muslims in fear of NZ-style terrorism

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS REPORTER ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

A SHOOTING like the Christchur­ch massacre in New Zealand could happen in Britain, Muslim community leaders fear.

They said the attacks – in which a gunman killed 51 people at two New Zealand mosques and posted the rampage live online a year ago – may have happened a long distance away, but it feels close to home.

Mohammed Kozbar, chairman of north London’s Finsbury Park Mosque (FPM) – which suffered a terror attack in which a worshipper was killed in 2017, said: “As a community here in the UK, this might happen as well. We have had to take extra precaution­s in terms of security.

“On the same day (as Christchur­ch attacks), somebody called us and said ‘you will be next, what has happened to them, will happen to you’.

“This was shocking. We never imagined that during such a crisis, after more than 50 innocent people got killed, that somebody would tell us this.

“We have to take everything seriously in the current climate. Islamophob­ia is spreading and it is being tolerated.”

Darren Osborne was jailed for a minimum of 43 years for murdering one man and injuring others after deliberate­ly targeting Muslims with a van to mow down worshipper­s near FPM in 2017.

The FPM bolstered its security after the Christchur­ch attacks. Other mosques and community centres have done the same, but smaller organisati­ons do not have the resources, experience or government assistance to deal with it, according to Mr Kozbar.

Asked if Britain feels like a less safe place to be a Muslim today than it did a year ago before the Christchur­ch killings, Mr Kozbar said: “Yes, I have to say it is. It is frightenin­g. It is not only me who feels that way, it is actually across our community.

“They feel less safe in their own country basically because they are Muslim.”

Shaykh Shams Ad-Duha Muhammad, of the British Board of Scholars and Imams, remembers a new feeling of being “vulnerable and like I could be in somebody’s cross hairs” when he went to pray after the Christchur­ch attacks.

Hosne Ahmed, a distant relative of his wife, was among the victims. She was shot as she ran back into the mosque to try to save her husband, Farid, who uses a wheelchair.

Mr Ahmed later said he forgives her killer and will pray for him.

On the prospect that a similar attack could happen in Britain, he added: “It is a horrible thing to say but I think it is a matter of expectatio­n – it is only a matter of time.”

A Home Office spokesman said: “The UK has some of the most robust legislatio­n anywhere for tackling hate crime and through our Hate Crime Action Plan we have worked hard to encourage victims of hate crime to report incidents so that we can bring perpetrato­rs who commit these crimes to justice.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom