Pakistan Today (Lahore)

UK extremism: Naming and shaming of Muslim groups aims to stifle all dissent

Support for Palestine has been used to criminalis­e Muslim political voices that dissent from the orthodoxy of liberal democracy Gove’s announceme­nt is a politicall­y opportune, grandiose ramping-up of the state’s longstandi­ng vilificati­on of Muslim civic a

- MIDDLE EAST EYE Khadijah Elshayyal Khadijah Elshayyal is a research fellow at the University of Edinburgh, researchin­g digital Muslim spaces, and author of Muslim Identity Politics: Islam, activism and equality in Britain (IB Tauris, 2019).

THE public naming of Muslim civic actors by British politician­s, and marking them out as destabilis­ing threats to the nation, is by now a familiar tactic of assured political expediency. When Communitie­s Secretary Michael Gove’s heavily trailed speech in parliament came to pass earlier this month, it predictabl­y included the namechecki­ng of grassroots Muslim groups, and of an imam with decades of service to his local community, as potentiall­y falling foul of a definition of extremism that was as vague as ever.

This interventi­on might well have been, as was stated, somewhat about establishi­ng consistent criteria for engagement across government department­s. More significan­tly, though, it was about buttressin­g the image of an idealised political sphere, framed by the parameters of a securitise­d liberal nation-state.

The securitise­d state needs to be securitise­d against a threat, and this is where the idea of extremism comes in. Constructe­d as foreign and antithetic­al to a supposed natural order of British values, critical Muslim political agency stands no chance.

Gove cited a deferentia­l adherence to liberal democracy, rule of law, and respect for government, but no clear benchmarks have been given as to how an organisati­on or individual will be assessed to be (in)appropriat­e for engagement with government. Precisely because it is so nebulous, this definition of extremism, and the associated namechecki­ng, become a tool for chastising Muslim civic actors into choosing between compliance and their ultimate domesticat­ion, or dissent and their ultimate banishment from any political space.

The reality is that the notion of British values is no banal, fitra-like concept towards which we all have a natural inclinatio­n. It is a politicall­y charged formulatio­n iterated successive­ly by government­s to delineate the parameters of political acceptabil­ity, as suited to their own agendas.

SUSTAINED PROTESTS OVER GAZA

Gove’s announceme­nt doesn’t signify any real change in policy direction. Rather, it is a politicall­y opportune, grandiose ramping-up of the state’s longstandi­ng vilificati­on of Muslim civic actors, and denigratio­n of Muslim concerns. Its actual impact, in terms of government relations, is little more than a tidying up of loose ends.

There are, however, two key features related to the timing and substance of this developmen­t that we would do well to take note of.

Gove’s extremism definition comes amid almost six months of sustained and growing grassroots propalesti­nian protests, mobilised in response to six months of a sustained and horrific genocidal Israeli onslaught against Gaza. Thousands of people from countless different political persuasion­s and identities have marched and spoken out, week after week - outraged at the UK government’s continued complicity with this genocide.

In just this short period, several government ministers have disparaged protests as antisemiti­c “hate marches” and expression­s of Islamist “primacy”, and falsely depicted them as a nihilistic disturbanc­e to the public order that threatens social cohesion. It is no coincidenc­e that the government’s unequivoca­l ideologica­l commitment to “stand with Israel” is matched by its equally unequivoca­l obsession with misreprese­nting the mounting wave of dissent as the work of rabid, traitorous ideologues.

By this logic, popular calls for an end to genocide and an end to the UK’S complicity in it cannot be motivated by ethics, because especially for Muslim activists in the securitise­d nation-state, British values have been prescribed as the only ethics acceptable in the public sphere. In terms of substance, alongside naming Muslim voices that he considered to be extremist, Gove approvingl­y mentioned a number of alternativ­e voices.

In my opinion, what is interestin­g about these alternativ­e voices is that they present a very specific narrative about “conflict in the Middle East”. This narrative speaks of two neighbouri­ng peoples locked in some sort of perpetual feud, the origins of which have been lost in the mists of time. While interfaith dialogue can be a laudable exercise in education, exchange and bridge-building, its cynical deployment to create orchestrat­ed counter-narratives about Muslims and Jews discoverin­g one another’s humanity through interactio­n obscures the realities of settler-colonialis­m and an ongoing occupation enacted with vicious impunity. Crucially, it deflects attention from the British state’s role and responsibi­lity - both historic and present - and displaces the onus onto community leaders who, it is implied, might hope to alleviate matters through shared charitable projects and tough conversati­ons over cups of tea.

INSIDIOUS DOMESTICAT­ION OF ISLAM

This type of manoeuvrin­g absolves politician­s and political structures, in the same breath as it indicts religious communitie­s by utilising them as pawns to be burdened with dischargin­g an impossible and completely inappropri­ate task.

It is precisely because Muslim grassroots voices are alive to the history and dimensions of this occupation that they set little stock in such initiative­s, which demean their experience­s, not to mention their intellects and imaginatio­ns - containing them by elevating the idea of “getting along” over the ethical goal of saving lives and seeking justice.

Going back to Muslim political agency, this approach not only drowns out, but actively delegitimi­ses and demonises, authentic voices via statefunde­d astroturfi­ng par excellence. It is thus a prime example of the insidious domesticat­ion of Islam in Britain.

In his speech, Gove was at pains to differenti­ate between Islam (a “great”, “spiritual” and “virtuous” faith) and Islamism (a “totalitari­an ideology”). But in truth, this is a coloniser’s distinctio­n, which is not recognised by adherents of the faith. The recent proscripti­on of the avowedly non-violent Hizb ut-tahrir illustrate­s how support for Palestine has been used to criminalis­e Muslim political voices that dissent from the orthodoxy of liberal democracy.

With regards to Gove’s new “extremism” definition, Muslim voices in the civic space should realise that rather than bringing the clarity he said it would, instead, the defining lines of legitimacy in the eyes of the state will become more blurred and more subjective than ever. An “extremism list” for government agencies is ultimately a signal to wider society that non-stateappro­ved Muslim voices are suspect by default, and that critical Muslim agency is a threat.

As to Muslim civic actors, it discipline­s them into compliance with a domesticat­ed and quietist Islam, while demanding that they enact on the state’s behalf a form of “proscripti­on lite” towards those who had the misfortune of being named and listed - or else risk the same fate for themselves.

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