Skip to content
The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Title

Name

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Mindanao
  • Visayas
  • National
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • International
  • SciTech
  • Health & Wellness
  • Sports
  • About Us
    • Regional Advertising Rates
    • Contact Us
    • Profile
  • Home
  • International
  • UK Muslims seek own path in countering terrorism – Arab News
  • Featured
  • International

UK Muslims seek own path in countering terrorism – Arab News

Desk Editor November 15, 2015

Feeling unfairly targeted by the government’s anti-radicalization drive, Britain’s Muslim community is rallying to find its own response to extremism and take a greater role in the fight against terrorism.
The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) has planned a series of conferences around the country where community leaders, activists and others will speak out against jihadist ideology, but also government security measures they say alienates Muslims.
“We do know that for any policy to succeed it needs to involve Muslim communities as part of the solution and not only as part of the problem,” said MCB secretary general Shuja Shafi at the first of a series of conferences in London this week.
The initiative comes as concerns mount over the number of Britons heeding calls by the Daesh (Arabic acronym for Islamic State) group and other extremists to launch attacks domestically or fight abroad.
Daesh has been blamed for a string of outrages, including coordinated attacks in Paris Friday that left 129 dead and more than 350 wounded.

Mohammed Emwazi, a British militant known as “Jihadi John,” became the poster-child for Daesh after he appeared in propaganda videos depicting the executions of Western hostages.
Emwazi, who the US military said was likely killed in an air strike in Syria on Thursday, and other jihadists who have conducted grisly attacks in recent years have cast a pall over ties between Britain’s Muslims and wider society.
“We feel like many in our community do, that for too long terrorism has cast a long dark shadow on our community,” said Shafi.
The government has repeatedly called on Muslim civil society to help counter the lure of jihadist ideology, but such measures have been poorly received.
A January letter to imams inviting them to “explain and demonstrate how faith in Islam can be part of the British identity” was criticized as implying that Muslims were not part of British society.

‘Culture of surveillance’
Conference delegates decried a government anti-extremism program called “Prevent,” which was launched after July 2005 suicide attacks in London by four Islamist extremists, three of them British-born.
“Prevent is supposed to concern all types of extremism but all evidence shows that through training, reporting, the real focus is on Muslim students,” said Shelly Asquith of the National Union of Students, who has campaigned against the program.
Critics say it creates a “culture of surveillance,” and since the start of the year local authorities, schools and universities have been required to report anyone showing signs of radicalization.
In September, police questioned a Muslim schoolboy who used the word “ecoterrorist” in a discussion in French class about environmental activism.
“If you’re genuinely concerned about engaging with the community then it cannot be done through the prism of securitization, the prism of Prevent,” said Yasmine Ahmed, director of UK Rights Watch.
Former police chief superintendent Dal Babu, one of the few Muslims and Britons of Asian origin to achieve the rank, said Prevent was a “problem.”
“We need to make sure that Prevent is for the people, by the people and has the trust of the people. Unfortunately we are not in that position.”

‘Puzzling’
One of the difficulties in preventing radicalization is that the process is not well understood, conference speakers said.
According to official figures, more than 700 Britons have gone to fight in Syria and Iraq, and of those nearly 300 have returned.
“The reasons for radicalization of these young people going to Syria are complex and multi-layered. There’s still no consensus about what’s going on,” said Catriona Robertson, director of the Christian Muslim Forum.
Social media has been cited by many as a key Daesh recruitment tool, but experts say it is difficult to take action against content that is mostly posted abroad.
Banning people from accessing such content is also difficult.
“What is the tipping point? Why do young British citizens, despite everything we have to offer, suddenly decide to get up and go to Istanbul and end up in Syria?” said lawmaker Keith Vaz, chairman of parliament’s home affairs committee.
“The prime minister is genuinely puzzled by this — I’m genuinely puzzled.”(JESSICA BERTHEREAU)

Link: http://www.arabnews.com/world/news/835826

fb-share-icon
Tweet 20

Continue Reading

Previous: Four in critical condition after tour bus crash in San Francisco – The Star
Next: Mysterious Space Junk Hurtling Towards Earth Crashes Into Indian Ocean – Abc News

Related News

Ursula-von-der-Leyen
  • International

EU to ban all Russian fossil fuel imports by 2027, says von der Leyen

Desk Editor May 7, 2025
India-Pakistan War
  • International

3 civilians killed in Jammu and Kashmir in cross-border firing by Pakistan: Indian Army

Desk Editor May 7, 2025
P20rice-PIA
  • Featured
  • Visayas

Tears of gratitude: Elderly Cebuano first to benefit from PBBM’s P20 Rice Program

Desk Editor May 7, 2025

Trending News

Zamboanga Winners Proclaimed ZC1 1

Zamboanga Winners Proclaimed

May 13, 2025
PhilHealth and DepEd forge partnership to ensure health coverage for all learners PhilHealth-DepEd1 2

PhilHealth and DepEd forge partnership to ensure health coverage for all learners

May 13, 2025
Home Credit PH and KServico Team Up to Bring Fast and Easy Motorcycle Financing to Empower More Filipinos on the Road Home-Credit1 3

Home Credit PH and KServico Team Up to Bring Fast and Easy Motorcycle Financing to Empower More Filipinos on the Road

May 10, 2025
Cebu province stocks 11K sacks of rice for P20/kilo program resumption NFA-rice-PIA 4

Cebu province stocks 11K sacks of rice for P20/kilo program resumption

May 9, 2025
PhilHealth and MMDA unveil “Payong ng Kapanatagan” mural along EDSA to celebrate Public Service and Health Protection PhilHealth_MMDA-Mural-Unveiling2 5

PhilHealth and MMDA unveil “Payong ng Kapanatagan” mural along EDSA to celebrate Public Service and Health Protection

May 9, 2025
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Blog
Copyright © 2025. The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper. All Rights Reserved.