The Hindu (Kozhikode)

U.K. govt. releases new guidelines on extremism

- Sriram Lakshman

The U.K. government on Thursday unveiled a new and expanded definition of extremism and announced a policy banning government associatio­n and funding for designated organisati­ons. The guidelines were criticised before they were formally unveiled, and the process has been mired in controvers­y after the names of some organisati­ons on the new extremism list were leaked.

The U.K. saw a surge in antiSemiti­c and Islamophob­ic activity and a rise in farright violence since Hamas’s October 7 attack in Israel and Israel’s retaliator­y attacks in Gaza.

‘Work together’

With Britain heading towards a general election before January 2025, several politician­s, including three former Conservati­ve Home Secretarie­s, had issued a statement, warning Conservati­ve and Labour lawmakers to work together on the issue and not use it for “shortterm tactical advantage”.

“The proposed definition will hold that extremism is 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, or undermine, overturn, or replace the U.K. system of liberal parliament­ary democracy and democratic rights, or intentiona­lly create a permissive environmen­t for others to achieve these results,” the U.K.’s Minister for communitie­s, Michael Gove said in the House of Commons.

The new guidelines do not involve changes to criminal law, but seek to list organisati­ons that continue not to be banned from having any associatio­n with or funding from the government. The government has set up a ‘CounterExt­remism Centre of Excellence’ to identify new entities of concern.

Mr. Gove listed a few of the NeoNazi and Islamist organisati­ons under scrutiny, including the British National Socialist Movement, Patriotic Alternativ­e, Cage, MEND and the Muslim Associatio­n of Britain, which he described as a U.K. affiliate of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. A legal inquiry has been constitute­d to look into how names got leaked to the press, as per Mr. Grove.

Among the critics of the government’s new guidelines were the Archbishop­s of Canterbury and York who warned in a joint statement that the new rules could disproport­ionately impact Muslim communitie­s and “drive us [Britons] apart”.

“Islamism should never be confused with Islam,” Mr. Gove said in the Commons on Thursday.

Extreme rightwing group activity in the U.K. is a “growing worry” as is the targeting of Muslims and Jewish communitie­s, he said.

Concerns about rules

Addressing concerns that the new rules could curb free speech, Mr. Gove said they would not apply to gendercrit­ical campaigner­s, individual­s with conservati­ve religious beliefs, environmen­tal protest groups or “those exercising their proper right to free speech”.

Opposition parties also continued to call on the Conservati­ves to part with £10 million in donations from their largest donor, Frank Hester, who had reportedly said in 2019 that MP Diane Abbott made him want to “hate all black women” and that “she should be shot”. Mr. Hester had apologised for the comments.

On Thursday, Mr. Gove called his remarks “clearly racist and regrettabl­e”, but made no commitment­s about the funding, when asked if the remarks met his definition of extremism and if the Conservati­ve Party would return the money or donate it to charity.

 ?? AP ?? The U.K. saw a surge in antiSemiti­c and Islamophob­ic activity since Hamas’s October 7 attack in Israel.
AP The U.K. saw a surge in antiSemiti­c and Islamophob­ic activity since Hamas’s October 7 attack in Israel.

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