Gulf News

Why Islamophob­ia hurts Europe

Europe has no moral right to preach the values of secularism to rest of the world

- BY ASHOK SWAIN | Ashok Swain is a professor of ■ Peace and Conflict Research at Uppsala University, Sweden.

Europe, which claims and aims to hold the moral compass for the rest of the world on minority rights, tolerance, and inclusivit­y, fails to hide its dark bigotry of Islamophob­ia anymore. Anti-Muslim sentiment has been on the rise in the continent, at least for the last two decades. It is neither confined to former communist countries in the East nor is it only hyped by far-right political parties and populist leaders. Islamophob­ia has become mainstream and even institutio­nalised in some cases.

Mainstream political parties have been giving Islamophob­ic statements and promoting policies and laws in the name of secularism and freedom of speech. European Union has been securitisi­ng its border, particular­ly in the Balkans, by enacting bordering practices that link crime-terror nexus with the Muslim population.

Prejudice against Islam is gaining strength in many corners of Europe. Statistics from across Europe show that the attacks against mosques and Muslims are taking place regularly. In the UK, Muslims are 12 times more likely to be victims of hate crimes than Christians.

Islamophob­ia has also occupied most of the social media space. Conspiracy theories about the so-called Islamisati­on of Europe are being cooked and delivered through the internet day in, day out. Online harassment and attacks have become very common, mainly targeting Muslim women. In France, one-fifth of all the reported Islamophob­ic incidents are online threats. Online Islamophob­ia in Europe is not driven by unknown trolls or farright groups only. Members of mainstream political parties, various so-called civil society outfits, and some media houses, directly and indirectly, contribute to this.

Anti-Islamist political platforms

The so-called refugee crisis from the Middle East and exaggerate­d fear of Islamist terror have pushed the far-right populist leaders from the fringe to be the leading power players in most countries in Europe. Frances’s National Rally, the UK’s Ukip, Spain’s Vox Party, Austria’s Freedom Party, and Sweden’s Sweden Democrat are some of the antiIslami­st political platforms gaining more extensive support.

The Far-Right anti-Muslim political group has 73 MEPs in the European Parliament, almost as many as the Greens. They hold 10 per cent of MEPs in the European Parliament after the 2019 election, compared to 5 per cent in the 2014-19 session.

A month ago, the UN Secretary-Antonio Guterres remarked that hatred and discrimina­tion against Muslims had reached epidemic proportion­s. How someone can wear a piece of cloth is even being securitise­d and politicise­d. Since 2010, France has banned the burqa. Other European countries, including Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, Norway, and Spain, have also enforced a full or partial ban on the burqa.

French Senate on April 8, 2021 passed an ‘anti-separatism’ bill, which needs to be ratified by the National Assembly to be the law, that bans girls under 18 from wearing hijab in public. There is also another amendment that aims at banning body-covering swimsuits, known as the burkini. Moreover, the justificat­ion of political leadership of repeated provocatio­ns being made by displaying cartoons of Prophet (PBUH) in the name of free speech leads to a feeling of further marginalis­ation among 5.7 million Muslims living in that country.

In Germany, some universiti­es have closed down prayer rooms used by Muslim students, citing the fear of those spaces being used for radicalisa­tion. In Spain, some teachers in schools are reportedly considerin­g students growing a beard as a sign of radicalisa­tion. Switzerlan­d has banned minarets in the Mosques since 2009, and in March 2021, the country voted to ban the burqa.

Discrimina­tion in housing and employment

The state-promoted Islamophob­ia has made it extremely difficult for the economic and social integratio­n of Muslims living in Europe. As the European Union Agency for Fundamenta­l Rights (FRA) study in 2018 finds, Muslims all over Europe are experienci­ng discrimina­tion in housing and employment because of their religion. Islamophob­ia has targeted Muslims by encouragin­g exclusion and discrimina­tion, which has endangered harmonious cohabitati­on and led to radicalisi­ng a section of youths.

The rise of Islamophob­ia has significan­tly contribute­d to the rise of populism, Euroscepti­cism, and the politics of anti-politics in the European continent. Electoral successes of far-right political parties have even forced many mainstream political parties to adopt this rhetoric. Polarisati­on has thus posed a severe threat to mainstream politics in Europe, with it to the establishe­d consensus on democracy, human rights, open and inclusive society. Fast-growing anti-Muslim bigotry has brought back ethno-nationalis­tic tendencies to the preWorld War II period in many countries.

Muslims are 5 per cent of Europe’s population, a minuscule minority. Even in France, where the some political leadership is openly adopting Islamophob­ic political posturing, Muslims are only 8.8 per cent. A continent, with its recent colonial history and plummeting population number, when it fails to accept and provide a safe space to such a small minority, which doesn’t even pose any political and territoria­l threats, has no moral right to preach the values of secularism and protection of minority rights to rest of the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates