The Jewish Chronicle

Charity bankrollin­g London Ramadan lights funded extremism-linked group

- BY DAVID ROSE POLITICS AND INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR

MCB’s current deputy chief praised Hamas founder as a ‘holy warrior’

The Aziz Foundation also funds the Islamophob­ia Response Unit

THE CHARITY that funded London’s Ramadan lights is bankrollin­g a media watchdog run by the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), which is boycotted by the government over its alleged links to extremism, the JC can reveal.

The MCB’s current deputy chief praised Hamas’s founder during a visit to Gaza as a “holy warrior” and has hosted a cleric who compared Jews to pigs and monkeys.

The charity, the Aziz Foundation, also supports an “Islamophob­ia Response Unit” that was originally set up by Muslim Engagement and Developmen­t (Mend), a campaign group accused in the Commons of extremism.

The response unit is now an independen­t organisati­on. One of its current trustees has called Israel a “terrorist state” that should be shunned like North Korea.

The foundation is financed and chaired by property billionair­e Asif Aziz. He is also a member of the board of the Mosaic Network, a charitable initiative founded by King Charles in 2007.

The lights in Oxford Street and between Piccadilly and Leicester Square were switched on before the Easter weekend by London mayor Sadiq Khan. Aziz owns properties in the area, including the Trocadero, where he hopes to build a mosque and Muslim community centre.

His foundation, whose income is more than £2 million a year, declared its support for the MCB’s Centre for Media Monitoring (CMM) in a recent report about its “social impact” from 2019-23. It said the CMM was trying to “change the narrative surroundin­g Islam and Muslims” by scrutinisi­ng media coverage.

The CMM features prominentl­y on the Muslim leadership body’s website.

Among the speakers at a CMM event held in Parliament last month to launch its report on coverage of the Gaza war was Dr Ghada Karmi, who had earlier described the Hamas attacks of October 7 as “wonderful” in a

TV interview with Workers Party MP George Galloway. Karmi said it was admirable that the Hamas fighters “exploded this whole rotten structure”.

The MCB’s deputy general secretary, Mohammed Kozbar, visited the grave of Hamas founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in 2015 when he travelled to Gaza and met leaders of the terror group. At the time, Kozbar praised Yassin as “the master of the martyrs of resistance, the mujahid [holy warrior] sheikh, the teacher”. The official boycott of the MCB dates back to 2009, when the then-Labour government severed all ties 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”. 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 to identify and “endorse” suitable Muslim armed forces chaplains.

The Aziz Foundation’s impact report revealed it also funds the Islamophob­ia Response Unit (IRU), which “supports people affected by Islamophob­ia” by providing legal advice and ensuring that victims’ voices are heard. Now an independen­t charity, the IRU was set up and run by Mend until 2021. Speaking in the Commons last month, Levelling-Up secretary Michael Gove said Mend was one of five organisati­ons that officials were assessing to see if they fitted the new government definition of extremism.

Gove said Mend gave “rise to concern” for its “Islamist orientatio­n and views” and that it was a “divisive force within Muslim communitie­s” that could “cause real harm to them”. Since October 7, one of the IRU’s three trustees, Ibrahim Khan, has posted calls on X/Twitter for sanctions against Israel and for it to be made “a pariah state just like North Korea”. On 14 November he posted that Israel was a “terrorist state” that was “illegally occupying and stealing land”.

But under British law, Khan wrote, “I would be imprisoned for expressing support for the main (previously elected) entity that violently resists Israel” – a reference to Hamas. This, he went on, meant the Foreign Office were “liars” when they said they wanted peace.

In another post, Khan said he accepted that Hamas had committed “atrocities”, but “when you selectivel­y curtail free speech especially when Hamas’s enemy is illegally occupying Palestine and murders 10k in three weeks, you can never get to peace”, because “no one makes peace with a gagged man”.

Asked about its support for the CMM and IRU, the Aziz Foundation told the JC: “For the record, The Centre for Media Monitoring and the Islamophob­ia Response Unit do not have allegation­s of extremism against them.” It did not respond to further questions.

A spokespers­on for the Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm said it was “alarmed at the Aziz Foundation making donations to such controvers­ial organisati­ons. The MCB has long been boycotted by the government, and its Deputy Secretary-General, Mohammed Kozbar, who was concerning­ly cited in a recent report on extremism, reportedly praised the founder of Hamas as ‘the master of the martyrs resistance’.

“The Aziz Foundation owes its donors, the Charity Commission and the Jewish community an explanatio­n of why it is funding such divisive organisati­ons, some of whose staff have views that are beyond the pale.”

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Controvers­y: The Ramadan lights in Oxford Street
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Controvers­y: The Ramadan lights in Oxford Street
 ?? ?? Trocadero mosque project: Aziz
Trocadero mosque project: Aziz

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