Britain First fascists target Bradford mosques

Paul Golding harassing Muslims in BradfordFar right activists have targeted mosques in Bradford attempting to hand out Bibles and distribute leaflets accusing community elders of failing to stop grooming gangs.

It is believed members of Britain First, some wearing uniforms, staged the protests at 10 places of worship in the city centre. The group posted images of themselves on Facebook confronting members of the Asian community.

They also visited the office of Labour councillor Nazam Azam. Mr Azam said: “They have come to Bradford to cause residents to fear for their safety. As far as I understand they have tried to access mosques. They tried to hand out leaflets but I don’t know anyone who took anything.”

He added: “It is concerning and disturbing. We have a lot of good work going on in Bradford in terms of community cohesion and for people trying to disturb that the people of Bradford won’t fall for it.”

Mr Azam said the police had been called although West Yorkshire Police could not confirm the incidents on Sunday. It is believed around 10 people took part in the action.

Continue reading

EDL protest in Rotherham

EDL Rotherham May 2014Rotherham was brought to a standstill when hundreds of English Defence League protesters marched through the town.

Hundreds of people from the EDL marched through the town centre between 1pm and 3pm on Saturday, with another large group from Unite Against Fascism holding a counter-protest at the same time.

A huge police presence of around 1,000 officers from forces around the country outnumbered both groups and ensured the march took place largely peacefully. There were no arrests and police said the event saw ‘minimal disruption and no disorder’.

Barriers were set up around the town centre, with the opposing groups cordoned off from each other. The groups traded insults across the barriers but were kept well apart.

EDL members chanted songs mentioning Islam and Allah as they marched. They gathered in All Saints Square to listen to speakers who insisted the organisation is ‘patriotic’, rather than racist.

Continue reading

Halal: not about food but fear of difference

Indignation about animal welfare is masking something a lot more insidious, argues Elizabeth Day:

We are in the grip of a moral panic about Islam. Muslims have become, like single mothers or benefit scroungers before them, a totemic symbol of our nastiest fears. As with all forms of prejudice, it is insidious, lurking in the shadows like noxious gas. But it is there if you look for it, if you are attuned to the vocabulary.

The term “takeover” is used again and again – in Birmingham, for instance, where 25 schools are currently being investigated amid allegations of a “hardline Islamist plot” even though the leader of Birmingham City Council is on record as saying he believes no such plot exists. It is there when newspapers run snidely worded articles on Muhammad being a popular boy’s name and it is there when fears are whipped up of a “Muslim majority” existing by 2050.

We should not conflate one issue (the provenance of our meat) with something much more unpleasant (our fear of otherness). Because for all the professed concern around what it means to eat halal meat, there is a deeper, more menacing undertow to the national debate. And that is the most unpalatable thing of all.

Observer, 11 May 2014

Gove planning to abolish Muslim school inspectorates, Sunday Times reports

Michael Gove Celsius 7-7Two Muslim school inspectorates face axe

By Richard Kerbaj and Sian Griffiths

Sunday Times, 11 May 2014

TWO Muslim school inspectorates face being closed down as Michael Gove, the education secretary, expands his investigation into alleged efforts by Islamists to take over secular schools.

The Department for Education (DfE) is understood to be investigating the Association of Muslim Schools UK (AMS-UK) and the Bridge Schools Inspectorate (BSI) amid claims that some of their inspectors support fundamentalist Islamic beliefs.

BSI, established in 2008, is approved by the DfE to inspect privately funded Muslim and Christian faith schools and AMS-UK is approved to inspect religious classes at private Islamic schools.

Continue reading

‘We have found Mayor Rahman to be fair, accessible and accountable’ –Tower Hamlets Citizens statement

Letter to the office of Mayor Lutfur Rahman – 30th April 2014

Tower Hamlets Citizens Statement in response to Panorama programme on Tower Hamlets 31st March, and the decision by the Metropolitan Police on 17th April that there was ‘no case to answer’.

Statement made by Tower Hamlets Citizens well before electoral process for May 22nd; absolutely not intended as an endorsement of any candidate for Mayor.

Continue reading

BNP protest against ‘mosque plan’ meets opposition

UAF anti-BNP demonstration Hemel HempsteadA demonstration by the British National Party against speculative pre-application plans for a new mosque in Hemel Hempstead was countered by two other groups today.

The Unite Against Fascism group and a members of the local Muslim community staged oppositions to the protest in Barnacres Road, where it was suggested the former Nash Mills Methodist Church site could house a mosque in unofficial proposals leaked by Dacorum Borough Council last August.

The BNP presence was led by the party’s organiser for the eastern region Chris Livingstone, who is standing as a BNP candidate in the European elections on May 22.

A strong police presence was maintained throughout the demonstration, with each faction separated by barriers manned by officers, opposite and around The Denes shopping centre.

Continue reading

‘No Trojan Horse extremism links’ Birmingham teachers hear

Birmingham Mail jihadist plotBirmingham City Council officials investigating an alleged plot by Muslim hardliners to take control of schools say they have seen no evidence of links to extremism, BBC News has learned.

But they have found “significant grievances” about governance and leadership, some on a large scale.

Officials were secretly recorded at a meeting with governors and teachers on Wednesday and a copy sent to the BBC. Birmingham City Council did not comment as the investigation is ongoing.

Education watchdog Ofsted and the Department for Education are also looking into the claims.

More than 20 schools in Birmingham are being investigated after a letter, apparently sent to someone in Bradford, claimed a Muslim faction had sought to gain influence over schools and remove staff who were not sympathetic to its religious agenda.

Wednesday’s meeting was held to give an opportunity for teachers and staff from the schools who have featured in the investigations to speak directly to Birmingham City Council’s chief executive, Mark Rogers, and Peter Hay, its director of children’s services.

Although they are not directly controlled by the local education authority, representatives from academy schools were also present.

The meeting was taped by one of the attendees and the recording has been sent to the BBC, as well as other media organisations.

Continue reading

Posted in UK

Anti-UKIP protesters descend on Scotland rally

Edinburgh anti-UKIP protestNigel Farage’s attempt to hold his first rally in Scotland last night saw a couple of dozen Ukip members outnumbered by hordes of protesters.

Mr Farage’s launch of his Scottish European election campaign was dominated by 300 or so anti-Ukip campaigners who descended on Edinburgh’s Corn Exchange in an attempt to upstage the right-wing leader.

Bearing placards with slogans such as “Stand up to racism and fascism”, crowds gathered under Radical Independence Campaign banners.

Security was tight, after the last time Mr Farage made a public appearance in Edinburgh – when he locked himself inside the Canons’ Gait pub on the Royal Mile to avoid a protestors outside.

Continue reading