The Jewish Chronicle

Activist who saluted Hamas is welcomed to Parliament

G Hardliner was among several controvers­ial guests rubbing shoulders with Labour Party MPs at reception

- BY DAVID ROSE POLITICS AND INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR

AN ISLAMIC hardliner who has defended Hamas attended a reception at Parliament hosted by a charity headed by the chief Muslim chaplain to Britain’s armed forces, the JC can reveal.

Anti-Israel activist Ismail Patel, who has met Hamas leaders in Gaza and “saluted” the group for “standing up to Israel”, was among the guests mingling with MPs and peers.

Also present was Zara Mohammed, the head of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), which is boycotted by the government over its alleged links to extremism.

Preacher Sheikh Ramzy, who has led recent protests at which marchers called for a new “intifada” and defended Labour’s Rochdale candidate after he was dropped by the party for inflammato­ry statements about Israel, was also in attendance.

The Ministry of Defence said that the host, Imam Asim Hafiz, who has served as Islamic religious adviser to the Chief of the Defence Staff since 2005, and was awarded an MBE in 2014, did not draw up the guest list and has long opposed extremism.

The JC has learnt that Hafiz was a member of a 30-strong WhatsApp group set up in 2020 to combat “Islamophob­ia” that included Patel, Ramzy and Mohammed Kozbar, now the MCB’s deputy secretary-general, who, like Patel, has met Hamas leaders in Gaza.

There is no suggestion that Hafiz endorses their views. His solicitor told the JC that “Our client’s work [...] in breaking down barriers and challengin­g extremism inevitably leads him to engage with individual­s who hold a range of views, including sometimes very different to his own.”

When Hafiz took to the stage to welcome those present, guests included Patel. As the JC revealed in October, Patel was filmed at a rally in 2009 saying: “Hamas is no terrorist organisati­on. The reason they hate Hamas is because they refuse to be subjugated, to be occupied by the Israeli state, and we salute Hamas for standing up to Israel.”

Patel added: “We are all Hamas,” and attacked the Board of Deputies for “bringing shame” on Jews by supporting Israel.

Photos taken on the night of the Commons event on 18 January show the guests rubbing shoulders with Labour parliament­arians including Sam Tarry, who ran Jeremy Corbyn’s campaign for the party’s leadership, and shadow health secretary Wes Streeting.

Patel is founder and leader of Friends of al-Aqsa, one of the organisati­ons behind the anti-Israel marches that have taken place almost weekly since October 7.

An outspoken supporter of the sacked anti-Zionist Bristol professor David Miller, Patel praised the killer of tour guide Eli Kay in Jerusalem as a “martyr” on Twitter in 2021.

Hafiz, who has served as Islamic religious adviser to the Chief of the Defence Staff since 2005, held the reception to raise the profile of the Avicenna Foundation, an educationa­l charity he founded two years ago to give scholarshi­ps to Muslim students and to encourage them to enter public life, which he runs as its president and trustee.

Another guest at the January event was Zara Mohammed, General Secretary of the MCB. She formerly worked for Mend (Muslim Engagement and Developmen­t), one of five organisati­ons that Levelling-Up Secretary Michael Gove said in the Commons last week is currently being “assessed” for alleged extremism.

The then-Labour government broke

Hamas is no terrorist organisati­on, he said

off ties with the MCB in 2009, after its then-deputy leader Daud Abdullah signed the “Istanbul Declaratio­n”, which said the “Islamic Nation” should “carry on with the jihad and resistance against the occupier until the liberation of all Palestine”. It further demanded that Muslims ensure “money, clothing, food, medicine, weapons and other essentials” were able to enter Gaza so that Palestinia­ns could “perform the jihad in the way of Allah Almighty”.

The official boycott of the MCB remains in place. Ministers ordered a further crackdown on government contact with the group in October after The Telegraph revealed MoD officials had been seeking help from the MCB in identifyin­g suitable Muslim chaplains to work under Hafiz.

Kozbar, who was a member of the 2020 WhatsApp group that included Patel, visited the grave of the terror group’s founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in 2015. Kozbar praised him as “the master of the martyrs of resistance, the mujahid [holy warrior] sheikh, the teacher”.

Another member of the group chat was Miqdad Versi, the MCB director of media monitoring.

The Jewish interfaith activist Laura Marks, who founded the Mitzvah Day charity and is a former chair of the Holocaust Educationa­l Trust, told the JC she was surprised by the presence of those holding controvers­ial views at the event and regarded Hafiz as an ally.

“I have worked with Imam Hafiz for nearly ten years and his commitment to fighting extremism and antisemiti­sm and to encouragin­g moderation and integratio­n is truly exceptiona­l and brave,” she said.

“We have been discussing ways to connect the exceptiona­l young Muslims in Avicenna with Jewish counterpar­ts which would be a long term investment in our shared commitment to building an open and tolerant society.”

A Ministry of Defence spokespers­on told the JC: “We have full confidence in Imam Asim Hafiz, who has a strong history of working with the Jewish Community and challengin­g extremism. This includes deploying to Afghanista­n to challenge extremist ideology.

“Imam Hafiz attended the event in a personal capacity. The event was attended by around 200, and Imam Hafiz had no involvemen­t in the invite list.” Asked by the JC how Patel, Ramzy and Mohammed had come to be present, the spokespers­on did not reply.”

The JC understand­s that members of the Jewish community, including a member of the Board of Deputies and Jewish leadership Council, were also at the gathering.

MCB leaders attended a more recent Commons event on 6 March, when they launched a report on coverage of the Gaza war by the group’s Centre for Media Monitoring. Among the speakers were Labour MP Afzal Khan, Tory peer Sayeeda Warsi and Ghada Karmi, a Palestinia­n doctor and activist.

In a recent TV interview with George Galloway, she described the October 7 atrocities as “wonderful”, saying it was “admirable that the Hamas fighters exploded this whole rotten structure”.

Patel praised the murderer of a tour guide as a ‘martyr’

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