More on Eccentric Reportage
The Guardian on Dilpazier Aslam and his critics, part 2. Scott Burgess pointed out this article by Shiv Malik in the New Statesman.
What readers of the Guardian were not told was that Aslam is a member of the extreme Islamist organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir. Though it publicly dissociates itself from violence, Hizb ut-Tahrir is shunned by most British Muslims and banned from many mosques…My strongly held view is that members of such a group should not be allowed to write on this subject in the national press (just as the British National Party, which also claims to be non-violent, is very rarely given space), but if they do their connection should be made clear, preferably at the beginning of the article.
Seems reasonable. Let’s not ask the BNP to write think pieces, and let’s not ask Hizb ut-Tahrir either – and if we do ask them, let’s sure as hell make sure we say what their affiliation is, as opposed to keeping it a secret from the readers. But apparently the Guardian didn’t think it seemed reasonable at all at all.
How had it come about that this Guardian journalist was reporting and commenting on such events without his background being made known to readers? When I raised this with the paper, it confirmed that Aslam was a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir but would only say the matter was “under review”…When I approached the Guardian again, it accused me of being “irresponsible in the extreme” and said it had complained to the editor of the Independent on Sunday. As for the key questions, it said only: “This is an internal matter which is currently under review and we have nothing further to add.”
The Guardian accused Malik of being irresponsible. That’s rich.
Just last Monday the responsible Guardian reported on a Hizb ut-Tahrir conference. It did a remarkable job of it.
Tony Blair is fomenting anger and frustration in the Muslim communities by branding widely held Islamic ideas as extremist, a conference was told yesterday…”After the bombs on July 7, before the dust had settled, before the dead were removed, before any investigation, the British prime minister was pointing an accusing finger at the Muslim community.”
Yeah right. I remember that – there was Blair at Gleneagles, pointing his finger, saying ‘The Muslim community did this.’ Uh huh.
“But, regardless of the amount of provocation, we need to stand firm with our Islamic principles. The problem is more than violence. The problem is an idea that you and I carry.” Those ideas, he said, included living under sharia law within a caliphate of Islamic countries, opposing the “corrupt and dictatorial” regimes in the Middle East and central Asia and resisting occupation of Muslim lands. “According to the logic of Blair and Bush, this is terrorism.” Hizb ut-Tahrir, he said, had been banned across the Muslim world for its political radicalism.
Note the ‘living under sharia law within a caliphate of Islamic countries’ bit – what that means, of course, is not just ‘living’ under sharia law, but imposing it on everyone with the misfortune to be living within the borders of that caliphate. Just imagine how pleased and excited we would all be if the House of Commons or Congress suddenly up and established sharia as the law of the land. Well, guess what, people living in Nigeria or Pakistan or Indonesia or the Philippines or Iran or Egypt don’t all automatically want to live under sharia just by an accident of geography. As a matter of fact a lot of people in those places loathe and detest the very idea. They prefer basic human rights and secular law, oddly enough.
So that article looks depressingly peculiar and sinister in the Guardian. Would it report on a BNP conference in the same bland, neutral, anodyne tone? Have they ever reported on the BNP in such a tone?
Allen Esterson gave a link in comments to this article by Dilpazier Aslam from last January on ‘a Muslim school.’
This is Manchester Islamic high school for girls, one of the 107 independent Muslim schools criticised last week by the chief inspector of schools, David Bell, for educating pupils “with little appreciation of their wider responsibilities and obligations to British society”…Next it is year 10 biology with Saduf Chaudhri, and the lesson is about drugs…”Why can’t you take drugs? From your own point of view, because, remember, you are Muslim,” says Chaudhri.
How’s that again? From your own point of view because you are a Muslim? That’s a contradiction, isn’t it? ‘Because you are a Muslim’ means something like ‘what is the rule on this for Muslims’ or ‘what does the Koran say on this’ – which is hardly the same thing as ‘from your own point of view.’
“Because you’re not meant to do anything that harms your body, because it’s not our body,” says one of the girls. Chaudhri flicks the overhead projection on; it’s a list of verses from the Qur’an. She reads aloud. “O you who believe. Intoxicants and gambling, [dedication of] stones, and [divination by] arrows, are an abomination – of Satan’s handwork: reject such [abomination], that you may prosper.” The girls are reminded that, not only are drugs bad for your health, they’re also bad for the next life.
Ah – bad for the next life. In other words the girls are reminded of something that is not true. They think their bodies are not their bodies, and that there is a next life which things can be bad for, and that there’s someone called Satan. Yeah, that’s what happens in religious schools, I realize that. But I don’t think it should be treated as just ordinary and acceptable and reasonable. Fairy tales are fairy tales, and they shouldn’t be taught to students as if they were true.
What will it take to get the Grauniad to realise that H-u-T is a no-so-crypto-Nazi organisation?
Have any of their staff actually READ “the recital” (ugh)?
Have the ideas and concepts of Sharia and Kaifah penetrated yet?
Or are they lost in cultural and philosophical relativism, wher nothing is actually true or valid?
Jalaluddin Patel, chairman of Hizb ut-Tahrir is quoted as saying:
“But, regardless of the amount of provocation, we need to stand firm with our Islamic principles. The problem is more than violence. The problem is an idea that you and I carry.” Those ideas, he said, included living under sharia law within a caliphate of Islamic countries…
Only a browsing among the articles on the Hizb ut-Tahrir website can give a full idea of what they are working for: http://www.khilafah.com/home/category.php?DocumentID=11607&TagID=2
“The system of government in Islam, which is the system of Khilafah [Caliphate], is a unitary system of one state and not a federal system. And Muslims all over the world are not allowed to have more than one Islamic State, nor to have more than one Khaleefah who rules them by the Book of Allah.”
And if someone presents himself (I somehow think “herself” doesn’t apply in this case) as an alternative to the elected Khaleefah (elected Imam leader of the Caliphate)?
“… Muslims cannot have more than one Khaleefah, and if another person tries to wrest his power it is necessary to kill that person… If anyone disputed with the Khaleefah in order to break up the State or to put himself forward as Khaleefah, he should be killed.”
Moreover:
“ The establishment of a Khaleefah is an obligation upon all Muslims in the world. Performing this duty, like any of the duties prescribed by Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta’Ala) upon the Muslims, is an urgent obligation in which there can be no choice or complacency. Negligence in performing this duty is one of the greatest sins, for which Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta’Ala) punishes severely.”
I leave to your imagine the punishment for this great sin, given that Shariah law is intrinsic to their aims and Shariah decrees that the punishment for theft is cutting off of a hand.
http://www.khilafah.com/home/category.php?DocumentID=9186&TagID=2
>Two of Labour’s four Muslim MPs yesterday told the Guardian that they oppose banning Hizb ut-Tahrir, as announced on Friday by the prime minister as part of a package of measures to tackle extremism after the bombing attacks on London last month.
Shahid Malik, MP for Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, told the Guardian that he thought banning the group could be a mistake. Mr Malik is one of four Labour Muslim MPs who have met Mr Blair to discuss how to crack down on extremism. He said: “By banning them their ideas are still there, but unanswered. British Muslims must intellectually confront these ideas.”
Sadiq Khan, MP for Tooting, has been targeted by the group’s activists.
Mr Khan, a civil rights lawyer, said: “I dislike immensely Hizb ut-Tahrir and despise some of their activists, but nothing I’ve seen or experienced amounts to them inciting violence. There’s no justification for a ban, and people are saying it’s an example of double standards as there is no plan to ban the British National party.”
Both MPs say they support the banning of al-Muhajiroun, whose leader claims it has disbanded.<
http://www.guardian.co.uk/attackonlondon/story/0,16132,1544724,00.html
I think that Messrs Malik and Khan, MPs, are right. The banning of Hizb ut-Tahrir would be counter-productive, and would be used by militant Muslims as a further ‘demonstration’ that the Government is pursuing a “war on Islam”, a notion that seems already to be quite widely believed among young UK Muslims.
To see how the banning of Hitb would be used to whip up Muslim “anger”:
http://www.mpacuk.org/content/view/4/905/103/
For more considered opposition to the ban from the MCB:
http://www.mcb.org.uk/presstext.php?ann_id=157
Allen
all good, although I can’t help wondering that the Guardian has got istelf into an almighty internal pickle over this matter, unusually, and unedifyingly getting caught between various interest groups’ strafings – it’s worth remembering one of their own junior staff was killed in the 7/7 bombings and buried on or around the date DA was fired. (There were no opinion columns relating to UK terrorism whatever that day in the Guardian, I presumed, out of respect for the frinds and family)
I sincerely doubt, having read the Guardian for over 20 years, that this mess is truly indicative of the editor’s overall position, or indeed many of the staff’s feelings; I should imagine the majority of reporters and other staff on the paper wish the thing would just go away…
Thanks for all the great additional detail, Allen.
I’m pretty sure that before it came to rivers of blood in the UK, there would be a massive flight to south asia. And if that happens, the strength of AQ and their affiliates in Waziristan will be absolutely nothing compared to their strength in the refugee camps of Mirpur. It would be a massive victory for the reactionary Islamists, and give them a secure power base (educated, relatively rich, angry, hating the West with a passion) in Pakistan.
I find double standards is interesting:
In 2004 Simon Smith, a teacher in Solihull, was suspended from his job because he was a BNP member.
Dr Imran Waheed, a spokesman for H-u-T works as a psychiatrist for an NHS mental health trust in Birmingham. When it came to light that he was an important member of the organisation, the trust released a statement:
Last night, Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Trust, which runs the Queen Elizabeth Psychiatric Hospital, refused to condemn Dr Waheed’s involvement in the group.
http://icbirmingham.icnetwork.co.uk/sundaymercury/news/tm_objectid=15778416&method=full&siteid=50002&headline=hospital-stands-by-under-fire-doctor-name_page.html
“We do assure the general public that we would take immediate action should we have any evidence that a member of staff had allowed their political or religious beliefs to adversely affect contact with service users. We cannot comment upon an individual member of staff for reasons of confidentiality.”
Sorry, in my haste I didn’t check the text thorougly, but you get the gist. Interestingly, the trust internal website has an article on Islamic ethics on it (but not Christian, atheist, Hindu, Buddhist ethics etc. There may be no connection with Dr Waheed, of course.
Interesting, Pascal. (I tweaked your first comment a little, guessing that it was a statement that the trust released – rather than, say, a flock of pigeons.) Of course, since it’s two different organizations, it’s hard to tell if it really is a case of double standards or just one of different rules in different organizations.
Psychiatry – not an ideal job choice for a Hizb person, I would have thought. Not an ideal job choice for any kind of religious zealot.