The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

The campaign to smear Britain as Islamophob­ic has distorted politics

A concerted drive to outlaw criticism of Islam or Muslims is fuelling a rise in extremism and endangerin­g the fabric of Britain’s pluralisti­c society. It is time to act, says Nick Timothy

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Like the protests against The

Satanic Verses 35 years ago, today’s rolling anti-Israel demonstrat­ions will come to be seen as a staging post in British politics. The late 1980s was when the public first noticed political Islam in Britain. The past few months were when they noticed that the politics of Islam has changed the way we are governed forever.

The Rochdale by-election – fought, like the Batley by-election three years ago, on sectarian lines about events in other countries on distant continents – is but a detail amid a greater shift in our society.

In Batley, Labour played the sectarian game and won. In Rochdale, they lost their own candidate because of his prejudice, before losing to their former MP who, Rishi Sunak noted last night in an address to the nation, “denies the horror of what happened on October 7… glorifies Hezbollah and is endorsed by Nick Griffin, the racist former leader of the British National Party”.

The Prime Minister also demanded that officers stop merely “managing” the protests, and start “policing” them instead. No wonder. At the protests thus far, so vast are the crowds, and so open the hatred and incitement on display, that public order policing has been shown to be completely hollow. On one hand the police say there is insufficie­nt evidence of serious public disorder to ban the marches. On the other, they refuse to arrest protesters for blatant criminal offences because they worry that confrontat­ion would spark wider disorder.

If such policing is a very British hypocrisy, events in Parliament reflect a very British complacenc­y. The week before last, by the admission of all involved, the House of Commons was bullied into submission by Islamists. By tearing up the rule book, and allowing a Labour amendment calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, Lindsay Hoyle, the Speaker, surrendere­d to the thugs who intimidate and threaten MPs who refuse to vote as they demand.

Yet within days, it was as if nothing had happened. Following comments that were indeed prejudiced from Lee Anderson, the former Tory deputy chairman, the story was turned completely. Anderson had said

Islamists “have got control of Khan… they’ve got control of Starmer… this stems with Khan, he’s given our capital city away to his mates”.

This could only be interprete­d to mean that Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, is an Islamist, or that, as a Muslim, he must be allied to Islamists. While Khan’s leadership of London is a failure, and the passivity of the Met before the demonstrat­ions a disgrace, this was too much. Anderson had the Conservati­ve whip removed the next day, and Rishi Sunak issued a statement condemning “an emerging pattern which should not be tolerated”, adding: “in Parliament this week a very dangerous signal was sent that… intimidati­on works”.

The response was hysterical. Commentato­rs demanded that Sunak must use the word “Islamophob­ia”. Labour politician­s condemned him for refusing to sign up to a loaded definition of the term. The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) – banned from contact with government – called for an inquiry into “structural Islamophob­ia” in the Conservati­ve Party.

The MCB’s supposed evidence included Suella Braverman’s statement that the Speaker’s surrender meant that “the Islamists, the extremists and the anti-Semites are in charge now”. This, claimed the MCB, was a “welltrodde­n Islamophob­ic path”. Another was a column I had written in this newspaper, in which I called, among other things, for the criminalis­ation of sharia marriages, which leave many Muslim women in Britain without legal rights.

As these examples show, the concept of Islamophob­ia is not only designed to protect Muslims from discrimina­tion and hatred. It is designed to protect Islam – and no other religion – from criticism, to shield Islamists from scrutiny, and to shut down debate about the social and political issues that matter to them.

Like followers of other faiths, Muslims are already protected from discrimina­tion and hatred in law. The Government explains that “a hate crime is any criminal offence which is perceived by the victim or any other person to be motivated by a hostility or prejudice based on… a person’s religion or perceived religion”.

Many of these organisati­ons use our liberal system to achieve anti-liberal ends

It is our institutio­ns and public spaces that form the battlegrou­nd

But the attempt to define Islamophob­ia, and to push the whole of society to accept the definition, goes much further. The official definition – accepted by the Labour Party and swathes of the public sector – was devised by the All Party Parliament­ary Group (APPG) on British Muslims in 2018. It says: “Islamophob­ia is rooted in racism and is a type of racism that targets expression­s of Muslimness or perceived Muslimness.”

The APPG report that launched the definition appeared to suggest that its purpose is to protect Islam from criticism. The report quotes an academic who had written: “Criticisms directed against Muslims often entail (at least implicitly) criticisms against Islam and criticisms directed against Islam are often simply tools for criticisin­g Muslims. Anti-Islamism is not the same as anti-Muslimism, but the two are intimately connected and both can be considered constituti­ve parts of Islamophob­ia.” The report agrees, stating: “That is why the term Islamophob­ia is not just theoretica­lly sound, but also practicall­y convenient.”

Any perceived criticism of Islam and Islamic practices, it seems, is then deemed Islamophob­ic, and should therefore be forbidden. Borrowing from American critical race theory, the concept’s inventors explain that Islamophob­ia is “more broadly encompassi­ng” than hatred, because it is “embedded” in invisible “social structures”. This convenient­ly removes the burden of providing hard evidence for accusation­s of Islamophob­ia.

Inevitably, Britain is declared guilty. Our country, the report says, is an

“Islamophob­ic environmen­t”. And perhaps that would be true, if one were so blinkered as to believe the examples it provides really are Islamophob­ic.

The examples are included to demonstrat­e the “breadth of Islamophob­ia in our society”, and declare each of them unacceptab­le acts – punishable perhaps in law one day, but punishable in the meantime by cancellati­on, intimidati­on and death threats.

The Batley teacher who during a blasphemy lesson showed his pupils a depiction of Muhammed has been in hiding now for almost three years.

One example of unacceptab­le behaviour is given as the use of “symbols and images associated with classic Islamophob­ia” such as “claims of Muslims spreading Islam by the sword or subjugatin­g minority groups under their rule”. As the historian Tom Holland notes, to accept that this can no longer be said is to deny the history of Islam – and endanger the lives of those who study the faith and its history. It would also contradict the hadith – believed to be a saying of Muhammed – that “the gates of Paradise lie in the shadow of the sword”.

Another example given is accusation­s against Muslims of “inventing or exaggerati­ng… genocide against Muslims”. So to dispute, as even Labour does, that Israeli military action in Gaza amounts to a “genocide” is to be Islamophob­ic. Another is “accusing Muslim citizens of being more loyal to the ‘Ummah’ [communuity] … than to the interests of their own nations”. This is a key tenet of Islamist beliefs and the teachings of Sayyid Qutb and Abul A’la Maududi.

Other examples will inevitably be abused. Prohibitin­g claims “that the existence of an independen­t Palestine or Kashmir is a terrorist endeavour” – something I have never heard – will be used to prevent calling Hamas a terrorist organisati­on. Stopping people making “claims of a demographi­c ‘threat’ posed by Muslims” will shut down discussion about projection­s that could see some European countries become Muslim majority by the end of the century.

Declaring it Islamophob­ic to allege “Muslim entryism in politics, government or other societal institutio­ns” will prevent the exposure of entryism by Islamists – an establishe­d method by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and its affiliates.

Indeed, the attempt to impose this definition of Islamophob­ia on society originates with this method. The predecesso­r to the APPG on British Muslims was the APPG on Islamophob­ia, which was wound up in 2017. It had been supported by a campaign group called iEngage until 2011, when MPs cut ties with iEngage over concerns about its support for extremists. Just as the APPG morphed into a new form, so iEngage relaunched, in 2014, as Muslim Engagement and Developmen­t – or MEND. But the links with extremism continued. Some staff members were exposed as extremists, and MEND attacked liberal Muslims and defended and promoted extremists such as Raed Salah and the pro-terrorist organisati­on CAGE.

MEND is of concern to the police and security services. According to Mak Chishty, a former Met Commander, if we do not confront it, “we risk having our safety and security threatened”. According to Sir Mark Rowley, now Met Commission­er, MEND seeks “to undermine the state’s considerab­le efforts to tackle all hate crime”. Privately, even Yvette Cooper insists that Labour has a policy of non-engagement with the organisati­on.

Yet MEND has, in the words of Sir John Jenkins, who reviewed the role of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in Britain, “exerted an important intellectu­al influence” on the definition of Islamophob­ia. Officially, it has been kept away from the work, but its own proposals have influenced the APPG definition, and the APPG report thanks a former MEND policy analyst, Dr Antonio Perra, for his contributi­on. Indeed Dr Perra has been described in evidence to Parliament as the “coeditor” of the report. The APPG also draws on evidence received from the

Islamophob­ia Response Unit – an organisati­on set up by MEND in 2017.

MEND is behind another organisati­on called Muslim Vote, which is trying to organise the millions of Muslim voters in Britain to vote out MPs who did not vote for a ceasefire in Gaza – and which has undoubtedl­y stoked up threats against elected politician­s. The campaign is led by an activist called Muhammad Jalal, who was previously the UK leader of now banned terrorist organisati­on Hizb ut-Tahrir between 2000 and 2007.

In addition to a variety of minor organisati­ons – which themselves employ some staffers with records of anti-Semitism online – the Muslim

Vote campaign is also supported by the Muslim Associatio­n of Britain (MAB). This was described by a government review of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in 2015 as “the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in the UK”, and links with the Brotherhoo­d are something its past leaders have openly admitted.

The review explained, “for some years the Muslim Brotherhoo­d shaped the new Islamic Society of Britain

(ISB), dominated the Muslim Associatio­n of Britain and played an important role in establishi­ng and then running the Muslim Council of Britain.” The MCB has itself stated that both the ISB and MAB are “founding affiliates”.

Despite these connection­s, the MCB plays a cynically skilful game of identity corporatis­m. It speaks the language of human rights and pluralism, has a female general secretary, and produces guides on eco-friendly mosques and making Ramadan plastic-free. It claims to represent more than 500 member organisati­ons, including mosques, schools, charities and profession­al networks. If anybody questions its actions, it claims they want to deny Muslims their democratic voice.

The MCB does not publish its list of members, but from organisati­ons that work closely with it, like Green Lane Mosque in Birmingham, or those that confirm membership, like the East London Mosque, we can get a flavour of the culture. East London Mosque published special condolence­s upon the death of the hate preacher, Yusuf al Qaradawi, who praised Hitler and talked about killing “Allah’s enemies, the Jews”. At Green Lane Mosque, Shaykh Zakaullah Saleem gave a sermon explaining the correct way to stone a woman to death.

By not confirming its relationsh­ip with these mosques, the MCB can avoid supporting or condemning examples of such extremism. Yet despite the availabili­ty of open-source material showing these institutio­ns for what they are, many of these mosques and Islamic centres are partners of the British state – local councils, the police, the NHS – and recipients of millions in public funding, for services from youth support to community healthcare.

Despite the government ban on engagement with the MCB, the state gives the organisati­on legitimacy and even public funds. The Ministry of Defence has used the MCB to appoint imams in the military. The police have worked with leading figures from the MCB, such as Mohammed Kozbar, the chairman of Finsbury Park Mosque who praised Hamas as “martyrs of the resistance”. In 2022 more than three quarters of funding for the MCB Charitable Foundation, £326,000, came through Kickstart, a government scheme to get young people into work by part-funding salary costs. The MCB uses the Charitable Foundation to run its Centre for Media Monitoring, which seeks to pressure the media into accepting MCB narratives, including the very concept of Islamophob­ia.

Many organisati­ons use our liberal system to achieve anti-liberal ends. Yet drawing these linkages and exposing the truth is, according to the definition of Islamophob­ia and its published examples, Islamophob­ic. Which very neatly demonstrat­es how the whole exercise is a modern-day witch trial. We can choose to accept a definition of Islamophob­ia, which amounts in effect to a one-religion blasphemy law and special protection for Islamists, or we can reject it – and be found automatica­lly guilty of an offence for which some extremists would threaten to kill us.

This is a significan­t danger. Threequart­ers of live MI5 cases follow subjects motivated by Islamist ideology. We know terrorists are sometimes sparked to action by perceived insults to their faith and kindred. David Amess, the late Conservati­ve MP, was murdered by an Islamist. Then as now MPs did what they could to avoid reality, and chose instead to blame a culture of incivility on social media.

Our institutio­ns and public spaces form the battlegrou­nd. The shows of strength through protest on the streets – and unchalleng­ed hatred and criminalit­y by many protesters – are tactics used in the struggle. So too are the mass Islamic prayers held on the streets, and the fights – in schools and colleges and elsewhere – for space to be given over for ritualisti­c prayer. As Ed Husain explains in his book The

Islamist, the “total Islamisati­on of the public space at college (open prayers, Islamist posters, women in hijab)” is an expression of power and intimidati­on, of staff, other pupils and other Muslims. In schools, colleges and universiti­es, across the public sector and now even in Parliament, the story is one of co-ordinated intimidati­on met with surrender.

We must fight back. Ministers should stop being coy and make the intellectu­al case against the Islamophob­ia definition. They should be more explicit about their policy of non-engagement with the MCB, and name extremist organisati­ons so others know who to avoid. They should update the Muslim Brotherhoo­d Review of 2015 with a new report. They should invite leaders and moderate religious figures from the Middle East and at home to play their part in a kind of counterref­ormation against the Salafist and Deobandi spirit that has radicalise­d much of Muslim life worldwide.

And they should lead with word and deed. Thoughtful, intelligen­t speeches matter to leadership. Ministers should begin a conversati­on with British Muslims about what it means to live as a citizen in modern Britain while remaining true to their faith. But ministers must do so honestly, and stop compromisi­ng with the Islamists and grievance peddlers who seek to dominate this conversati­on.

For these extremists want to define normative Islam in a hardline way, and they want to define the relationsh­ip between Muslims and non-Muslims as zero-sum, a them-and-us confrontat­ion. At least in one respect they are correct: this is a them-and-us situation. But we have allowed them to draw the line between the two sides for too long. The divide must not be Muslim versus non-Muslim, but between those who accept the full reality of life in a pluralisti­c society and those who do not – between those who accept and love Britain for all it is, and those who want to turn it into a harsh and narrow theocracy that would be rejected by the overwhelmi­ng majority.

Those on the right side of this divide should be supported with all we have. But those who choose to put themselves on the wrong side should be treated as harshly as we would any other fascist – for religious fascists is what these extremists are. And we should pursue a policy of aggressive opposition not only to extremism but domestic separatism. Most immediatel­y, the marches against Israel should be banned. The police inaction before blatant criminalit­y is evidence enough that the threshold to ban them has been reached. If the Met refuses to accept this, the “new robust framework” that Prime Minister’s promised last night should change the law to allow ministers to ban marches in certain circumstan­ces without reference to chief constables, including, for example, when ongoing marches repeatedly disrupt our shared life and cost the public purse too much.

The police and Crown Prosecutio­n Service must be made to uphold the law, but the law should be tightened to clamp down on incitement, hate speech and extremism. Public sector engagement with extremist organisati­ons must be driven out – with serious repercussi­ons for those who refuse to respect policy. Mr Sunak must be held to his vow that “no extremist organisati­ons or individual­s are being lent legitimacy by their interactio­ns with central government.” There should also be a register of imams and mosques, with unacceptab­le behaviour leading to preaching bans and closures.

We must shut down TV channels that broadcast hatred. Charities that promote extremist beliefs should be closed down. Foreigners who spread Islamist ideology should be deported immediatel­y without appeal. The burqa should be banned in public places, and the hijab banned for school children. Islamic supplement­ary schools should be investigat­ed and regulated properly.

The dual jurisdicti­on of our national law and sharia law must end, with sharia marriages criminalis­ed. Public funding for mosques and Islamic centres must cease. When new mosques are built, they must be without minarets and in a way that is sympatheti­c to the surroundin­g architectu­re.

Inevitably this prospectus will be too robust for many liberals, but it is the only way to save pluralisti­c values. Our response to separatism and sectariani­sm must be swift and muscular. Yet for many mainstream politician­s, ignorance, fear and timidity – and a misplaced progressiv­e desire to protect minorities – all fuel appeasemen­t. For others the motives are more cynical. Some Labour politician­s are playing a game of equivalenc­e following their own anti-Semitism scandals. And some, for electoral reasons, have undoubtedl­y chosen to ride the Islamist tiger.

The danger is it will be not just them who end up eaten, but all of us – and Conservati­ves have a duty to act.

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