Arson attack on Australian mosque

Whyalla mosque arsonWhyalla’s Muslim community has been praying outside in stifling temperatures above 40C after fires damaged their mosque.

The fires, which started about 4am on Thursday, are being treated as suspicious. A spokesman for the community, Hasan Aziz, said he believes the attack was a “hate crime”.

“The way it’s been carried out tells us that it’s a targeted crime, a hate crime,” he said. “In a town like Whyalla, of all the places, it’s very unlikely for such an act to be carried out. There’s been no problems in the past.”

The blaze caused smoke damage inside the Morris Crescent mosque after fires were lit at the front and back door of the property. “The front and the back doors have been burnt totally,” Mr Aziz said. “They put petrol on both of them and they lit it on fire.”

Mr Aziz said that the community, which meets twice a day at the mosque, has been forced to pray outside in searing temperatures. “It’s pretty bad. We can’t carry out any of the prayers, so we’ve had to do it outside,” he said.

The building was insured. A police spokesman said the fire caused minimal damage but appeared to be suspicious. Local Crime Investigation Branch detectives are investigating.

News.com, 18 January 2013

Wilders to visit Australia in February

Dutch anti-Islam campaigner Geert Wilders will visit Australia next month.

The right-wing MP was due to visit in October but was forced to postpone because the federal government took its time deciding whether to approve his visa.

Tour organisers Q Society – a group concerned about the so-called “Islamisation of Australia” – have now announced Mr Wilders will speak in Melbourne, Perth and Sydney in February.

“The Australian experiment of multiculturalism is failing in relation to Islam, just as it has failed everywhere else,” the group says on the event website. Australians are being misled to believe Islam is ‘just another religion’ – when it is in fact much more.”

Immigration Minister Chris Bowen has condemned Mr Wilders’ extremist views but ultimately decided not to use his ministerial discretion to block his visa.

AAP, 16 January 2013

Melbourne: Plan for mosque draws anti-Islam sentiment

Anger at plans for a mosque and evangelical church to be built side-by-side in Melbourne’s east has spilled over amid claims Islam ”directly contravenes our freedom values”.

It was standing room only at the City of Casey chambers in Narre Warren on Tuesday night at one of the last meetings before the council debates a proposal to build a mosque and community centre on a vacant industrial lot in Green Street, Doveton.

The mosque would be next to the church and headquarters of Catch the Fire Ministries, run by controversial anti-Islam Pastor Danny Nalliah who was acquitted of a racial vilification charge brought by the Islamic Council of Victoria in 2006. The church has already been approved by council and construction is expected to begin within weeks.

Residents at the meeting cited traffic concerns, noise pollution, and fears the mosque would be used to preach hate speech.

Mayor Amanda Stapledon repeatedly asked the gallery of about 50 people to be quiet amid booing, cheering and heckling.

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Hizb ut-Tahrir lashes Australian think tank study

HT logoControversial Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir has hit back at claims it may pose a security threat.

Perth-based think tank Future Directions International (FDI) says while Hizb ut-Tahrir does not advocate violence, its anti-Western rhetoric could pose a “socio-cultural” security threat by increasing the disharmony between Muslim and non-Muslim Australians.

In the long term, the group may pose a significant national security threat by indirectly instigating terrorist attacks, FDI warned in a study last week.

But Hizb ut-Tahrir says the study is riddled with errors and lacks proper analysis.

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Australian broadcaster ordered to read on-air apology to Muslims

Alan JonesControversial broadcaster Alan Jones has been ordered to apologise for comments he made in 2005 describing Lebanese Muslims as “vermin” and “mongrels”.

The Administrative Decisions Tribunal (ADT) ordered Jones to apologise on his 2GB radio show between 8am and 8.30am any day next week over the comments he made on-air in April 2005.

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Melbourne: local council refuses to provide a platform for Islamophobia

Mark Durie Third ChoiceCasey councillors have overwhelmingly rejected deputy mayor Sam Aziz’s call for a discussion of the dangers of Islam before they decide on a planning application for a mosque in Doveton.

At last night’s meeting, mayor Amanda Stapledon said such a discussion would create a very poor perception in a multicultural community.

Tensions between the mayor and her deputy, former close allies, were clear during a fiery debate in front of a large public gallery.

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Australian radio presenter who vilified Muslims fails to get lawsuit thrown out

Alan JonesShockjock Alan Jones has been unsuccessful in his latest attempt to have a lawsuit claiming he racially vilified Sydney’s Muslims three days before the Cronulla riots in 2005, dismissed.

In those proceedings, father-of-eight Sam Ekermawi, of Moorebank, claims Jones vilified Muslims when he derided “Lebs”, “wogs” and “Middle Eastern” people in his breakfast program on 2GB on December 8, 2005.

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