John Ware – a record of tabloid-style smears and witch-hunts

Lutfur Rahman and John Ware“The Mayor and Our Money”, the Panorama documentary on Lutfur Rahman’s administration in Tower Hamlets that was broadcast this evening (being carefully timed to damage Lutfur’s reputation in the run-up to the mayoral election in May) failed to pin any charges of financial or political corruption on Lutfur, despite advance publicity suggesting otherwise. What we got instead was unsubstantiated smears and innuendo. This was much as expected, given that the reporter was John Ware, whose shoddy journalistic methods have previously been exposed by media analysts.

Readers of Islamophobia Watch will probably remember that Ware was responsible for the notorious 2005 Panorama programme attacking the Muslim Council of Britain, entitled “A Question of Leadership”. In a detailed analysis of this documentary in Pointing the Finger: Islam and Muslims in the British Media, Julian Petley accuses Ware of engaging in “smear journalism, an odious form of journalism that either lacks the proof for the points it wishes to make, or the courage to say what it means and face the legal consequences, or both. This is exactly the kind of journalism one expects from the tabloid press (for which Ware, entirely unsurprisingly, once worked), but to find it in full flower on what is supposed to be the BBC’s flagship current affairs programme is surely quite unacceptable.”

Petley concludes: “‘A Question of Leadership’ can be described as a classic example of thesis-driven journalism. There is nothing necessarily wrong with this kind of reportage, but problems arise when it tips over into tendentiousness, when one has the distinct impression that the journalist is grinding an axe, that they’ve gone out to find the facts to fit – as opposed to test – their thesis, and that nothing they discover will sway them from the view with which they set out in the first place. This is the distinct impression left by this particular edition of Panorama….”

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Warsi plots Islamification of UK government, NSS warns

Yesterday the Huffington Post published an interesting and wide-ranging interview by Mehdi Hasan with Tory politician and government minister Sayeeda Warsi.

The interview opens with Warsi, who was in the middle of chairing a high-level international meeting of the prime minister’s Global Islamic Finance and Investment Group, explaining how she has persuaded David Cameron that it makes good business sense for the UK to become a world centre for sharia-compliant finance. This is the only reference to sharia in the entire article.

The National Secular Society website features a daily news round-up compiled by NSS president Terry Sanderson. Here is how Sanderson reports the HuffPo interview with Warsi:

NSS Warsi advancing sharia

‘The adoption of sharia in Britain sets a worrying precedent’

Sunday Telegraph readers respond to last week’s misleading scare story about the Law Society’s advice to solicitors drawing up wills in accordance with the wishes of their Muslim clients. Some examples of their comments:

“Previous immigrants to this country (Huguenots, Jews, West Indians, etc.) have enjoyed the freedom to practise their own religion but have also had to accept our laws.”

“So keen are some people to pander to ‘inclusiveness’ that they are willing to throw overboard Magna Carta and the 800 years it took to enshrine the principle of one law for all.”

“This is this the slow drip of the tap – the erosion of the British way of life by the minority.”

“Muslims are a minority in Britain, and their views should not be allowed to impinge on the majority. This favouritism should be stamped out.”

“It is time we stopped being afraid of upholding our hard-won democratic values for fear of offending newcomers.”

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Gove broadens inquiry into ‘creeping Islam’

Seriously, that’s the headline to the report in today’s Sunday Times on the latest developments in the so-called “Trojan Horse” scandal in Birmingham.

Given that Richard Kerbaj and Sian Griffiths were the journalists who fell for the transparently forged letter in the first place, breaking the story under the headline “Islamist plot to take over schools”, you might have thought that they would have been too embarrassed to continue reporting this issue. But when it comes to anti-Muslim witch-hunting, there are obviously some journalists who are devoid of any sense of shame.

Speaking of which, over at the Sunday Telegraph Andrew Gilligan’s report continues to refer to the “Trojan Horse” plot, but without bothering to remind readers that the letter which introduced that name was a fake.

Anti-fascists demonstrate against EDL in Peterborough

Peterborough TUC march against EDLCrowds gathered in the centre of Peterborough as over 300 members of the English Defence League (EDL) marched through the city.

The EDL members, waving banners and chanting marched from the Peacock Pub in London Road to outside Peterborough Magistrates’ Court in Bridge Street.

The march followed an earlier counter march by the The Peterborough Trades Union Council (PTUC).

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Police make six arrests after protest against new mosque in Sunderland

Six people have been arrested after a protest against a new mosque in Sunderland. Around 100 took part in the demonstration today which was organised at the site of the new mosque in St Marks Road in Millfield.

Officers made a very small number of arrests following minor public disorder which took place before the demonstration. In total six were arrests were made for disorder. All demonstrators have now moved from the area.

Newcastle Chronicle, 29 March 2014

Update:  See “Five bailed and one charged over disorder at Sunderland mosque protest”, Sunderland Echo, 31 March 2014

Inspectors investigating Park View School accused of aggressive behaviour and bias

Park View School

Inspectors who visited an academy at the centre of allegations about an Islamist takeover are being accused of behaving inappropriately, asking students intrusive, personal questions and showing bias.

Park View School in Birmingham received two snap Ofsted inspections and a separate visit from a team of Department for Education (DfE) inspectors this month, after claims that it was one of four schools in the city “taken over” by radical Muslims.

But the high-achieving secondary, which rejects the allegations, is concerned about the way the inspections were conducted and fears that it is not being given a fair hearing.

Last Saturday, it was reported that Park View would be placed in special measures following an inspection conducted just four days earlier. The apparent advance briefing on a report that has still not been published prompted a furious public reaction from Lee Donaghy, an assistant head at the academy.

Mr Donaghy took to Twitter to complain to Ofsted schools director, Mike Cladingbowl, about the leaking of the verdict before it had been “quality assured” and the way his inspectors behaved when they visited the school.

Now sources at the Birmingham secondary have told TES that they were also alarmed by the behaviour of DfE inspectors who asked “very leading”, “very personal” questions that made students feel “uncomfortable”; and appeared to be selective in the evidence they gathered.

“They were taking pictures of displays on the wall relating to Islam and ignoring displays that related to other religions,” a source claimed. “There were posters about multi-cultural society – they weren’t interested in those, they were just taking the ones that had any Arabic script in them.”

Mr Donaghy told Mr Cladingbowl that a senior Ofsted HMI inspector had opened a meeting with a Muslim member of staff at the school with the question, “Are you homophobic?”.

The assistant head also complained that an HMI inspector had appeared to joke about the number of male Muslim teachers at the school. When discussing where a colleague had gone, the senior inspector had reportedly said that he had “left with a man with a beard”. “Though that’s not much help as there are so many,” the HMI said, he claimed.

According to Mr Donaghy the HMI was supposed be quality assuring the work of the three other Ofsted inspectors at the school. “How can we have faith in the fairness of the inspection after that?” the assistant head asked Mr Cladingbowl.

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Muslim prayer room signs vandalised at King’s College London

King's Muslim prayer room vandalism

Muslim prayer room signs have been vandalised at Guy’s campus, with one sign having “Muslim” scratched out and other with a “#jewish” sticker over the same word.

Students, who spotted the signs last night, have expressed fear of “threats and violence” that may be used against them from the blade used to deface the board. The College has been called on to look through CCTV to find those responsible, in what has been described as a “clear violation of safe space policy”.

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The Spectator finds a Muslim it likes

Spectator Irshad Manji coverThe Spectator devotes the cover of this week’s issue to promoting a Muslim. Unlikely, you might think, until you find out that the Muslim in question is Irshad Manji, much admired by Daniel Pipes, Melanie Phillips and Geoffrey Alderman – not least because of her enthusiastic support for the state of Israel.

Inside the magazine, Manji outlines her views in an article entitled “It’s time to reclaim Islam from the fanatics. Here’s how”. Unsurprisingly, this involves reforming Islam along the lines advocated by unrepresentative individuals such as “my friend Maajid Nawaz” of Quilliam – one of the few Muslims who can reasonably claim to be held in even more contempt within the Muslim community than Manji herself is. She also boasts about posting links to the racist Jyllands Posten cartoons on her website – all in the interests of freedom of expression, you understand.

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