The Jewish Chronicle

Uyghur rights campaigner claims he was barred by Labour for ‘Islamophob­ia’

- BY JC REPORTER

A JEWISH campaigner who has spent years highlighti­ng the plight of Uyghur Muslims in China claims he has been blocked from being a Labour councillor over Islamophob­ia.

For more than two years Andrew, an Orthodox Jew who lives in north west London, has been protesting outside the Chinese Embassy over its Muslim concentrat­ion camps.

The campaigner, who has asked for his surname to be withheld for security reasons, is a Labour Party member who applied for selection as a council candidate in Barnet next year.

However, he claims the party blocked the move on the grounds of ‘Islamophob­ia’ after he tweeted an open letter leader to Sir Keir Starmer questionin­g Labour’s use of the word.

The letter welcomes Labour’s pledge to “eliminate Muslim hatred from the Labour Party” as a “critical and important step”. But it questions the use of the word “Islamophob­ia” as opposed to “anti-Muslim hatred”.

It adds that while Islam is a “wonderful religion of peace and dignity”, freedom of speech gives Labour members the right to question the religion, provided their views are neither discrimina­tory or dangerous. The letter argues: “Islamophob­ia means ‘Fear of Islam’ – it immediatel­y disallows criticism of the religion of Islam… The term that should be used is anti-Muslim hatred, as it is always wrong … to hate someone because of their religion or race.”

In his letter, Andrew goes onto say that while he respects and admires Islam, he is fearful of it because of the violence carried out by a tiny number of radical Islamists, believing they do so in the name of their religion.

Andrew was told that because he had tweeted this open letter he was no longer suitable to be a council candidate and he lacked awareness of equality.

Human rights groups believe China has detained more than one million Uyghurs in concentrat­ion camps in Xinjiang – claims that the country denies.

Labour said it had “adopted the APPG definition of Islamophob­ia in 2019, and our NEC recently reaffirmed this by agreeing a new Islamophob­ia code of conduct - which allows for free expression. As a party, we believe it is for Muslim people to define the hate, prejudice and racism they face, including the terms used to describe them.”

He has been protesting for years outside the Chinese Embassy

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