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Britain
British religious clerics accuse media of distorting situation in Afghanistan
2023-09-19
It would be awfully useful if someone had a list of who went and who reared up on their hind legs to issue pro-Taliban apologetics afterward.
[AMUtv] British imams who recently visited Afghanistan said this week that the mainstream media has distorted the situation in Afghanistan and that the Taliban
...the Pashtun equivalent of men...
has not imposed a ban on girls’ education but has only issued a temporary suspension.
"temporary"...yeah, that's the ticket!
The delegation visited the country last month and held multiple meetings with senior Taliban officials.

In a discussion at Queen Mary University this week, Sheikh Hamd Mahmood said that girls’ education had not been banned per se, but rather "liberal, secular education had been suspended."

Sheikh Haitham al-Haddad said in the discussion that the issue was being used by the West to demonize Afghanistan. He said that in any society emerging from war, there is a hierarchy of needs and security and the economy comes first.

The imams stated that the education system in Afghanistan has been influenced by the Western system of knowledge and sees it as Western colonialism.

Comments made by the holy mans meanwhile sparked an outcry on social media with critics stating it was a "shameful" attempt to "whitewash" the Taliban’s actions and "lobby" for the Taliban government.

"These are wild bandidos faceless myrmidons and terrorist supporters," said a social media user.

Women’s rights activists were also angry about the visit and the holy mans’ comments. In a petition on a Change website article, activists said: "British religious scholars, mainly from India, Pakistain, and the Arab world," are attempting to "whitewash the oppressive actions" of the Taliban.

The activists asserted that all the Taliban officials who met with the British Moslem holy mans in Kabul are involved in "widespread violence" in Afghanistan and are "subject to United Nations
...an organization originally established to war on dictatorships which was promptly infiltrated by dictatorships and is now held in thrall to dictatorships...
sanctions."

Ahmad Zia Takal, the deputy spokesperson for the Taliban’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs posted on his social media account that the Taliban’s acting foreign minister Amir Khan Muttaqi had discussed the possible "positive changes after the complete rule of the Islamic Emirate (Taliban)" with the "scholars from Britannia."

According to Takal, Muttaqi also asked the holy mans to "convey the true image of Afghanistan to the world and their people."

The Taliban has implemented significant restrictions on women and girls after regaining power in August 2021. It banned girls from secondary schools as well as prohibited women from getting higher education — rendering Afghanistan the only country in the world where women and girls are banned from school, above Grade 6, and university.
Related:
British imams: 2008-04-14 Only 30 active terror plots inside Britain
British imams: 2007-09-07 Nearly half of UK mosques are controlled by Deobandis
British imams: 2004-11-30 Muslim Extremists Preach Violence in Europe
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Britain
Jolly jihadi boy's Legoland holiday
2014-02-18
Legoland has been hired out to a radical Muslim cleric for a ‘Family Fun Day’. Maybe that’s ‘Fun’ as in ‘Fundamentalism’.

The theme park in Windsor, Berkshire, has accepted a booking from a man said to be among the top 25 hate preachers in Britain.

Haitham al-Haddad leads the Muslim Research and Development Foundation, which is based in Tower Hamlets, and is in favour of turning this country into a Sharia state.

Al-Haddad is an enthusiastic supporter of Taliban policies, believes that Jews are ‘descended from apes and pigs’, homosexuals are criminals and those who leave Islam should be killed.
All in all a charming gentleman who should be hung from the nearest lamppost if any legal excuse can be found, or shipped back to the land of his ancestors otherwise.
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Britain
Update on the Woolwich Attack: Soldier's 'Killer' In Dock On Terror Link Three Years Ago
2013-05-26
[Telegraph] One of the alleged killers of Drummer Lee Rigby appeared in court in Kenya suspected of leading a group of Islamists trying to join forces of Evil in Somalia.

The Sunday Telegraph can disclose that Michael Adebolajo was held by police close to the Somali border with a band of "radicalised" Moslem youths who wanted to join the notorious al-Shabaab
... the Islamic version of the old Somali warlord...
group.

He was deported to Britannia after he appeared in court in Mombasa in November 2010.

Two months previously the head of MI5 had warned that Britons were training in Somalia and it was "only a matter of time before we see terrorism on our streets inspired by those who are today fighting alongside al-Shabaab". It also emerged that the other suspect in the soldier's murder, Michael Adebowale, 22, was tossed in the slammer
Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try!
by police in London two months ago after shopkeepers complained about a group of Moslem activists.

The disclosures raise further questions about the monitoring by the security services of Adebowale and Adebolajo, 28, whom sources have said was known to MI5 but not assessed as a "threat to life".

o On Saturday night a further three men, aged 21, 24 and 28, were nabbed
Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try!
in south-east London on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder. Police used Tasers to detain two of them and were searching four addresses.

o Calls were made for Anjem Choudary, the leader of the al-Muhajiroun group to which Adebolajo has been closely linked, to be subject to a Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measure, the successor to control orders;

o Eric Pickles, the Communities Secretary, uses an article in The Sunday Telegraph to warn public bodies, including the police and judges, that it is time for them to bring the full weight of the law to bear on Death Eaters and not be hampered by political correctness;

o A leading historian who was a member of a Whitehall panel intended to tackle bad turban Moslem preaching at universities told how officials opened a "dialogue" with a body that seemed to endorse aspects of extremism;

o In what was feared to be a copycat attack in Gay Paree, a uniformed soldier was knifed in the throat by a man said to be "bearded and of North African origin", who was on the run on Saturday night. The soldier was badly hurt in the attack, which police were treating as a terrorist incident;

o The father of Damilola Taylor, the boy murdered in 2000 in south-east London, told how he had mentored Adebowale before the former gang member turned to radical Islam.

A report on MI5 and MI6's knowledge of and assessment of the two suspects will be given this week to MPs on the parliamentary committee that scrutinises the security services.

The Sunday Telegraph has established that Adebolajo was arrested by Kenyan authorities in the coastal town of Lamu, before being taken to Mombasa, where he was detained. He appeared in court in late November 2010 alongside other alleged Islamists. He and the others, who were said to age from 18 to 22, were remanded to a local cop shoppe. A court report at the time said he was a "Nigerian who had a British passport" and spelt his name incorrectly. Sources in the country confirmed his identity yesterday and said Adebolajo was subsequently deported. He later complained that he had been mistreated.

Adebolajo is understood to have said in court that he wanted access to legal services and to talk to the British Ambassador to Kenya. He also complained that the police said he was a Christian, when he was a converted Moslem.

"He was very arrogant, he was restrained and handcuffed very well," the source said. "We deported him back to the UK. When he was back in the UK he complained about us, that we tortured him. The British embassy in Nairobi wrote to us about the complaint, we told them that we did not torture him. I do not know if the letter arrived but that was what we wrote to them."

According to newspaper reports at the time, the group boarded a speedboat from Lamu Island to the village of Kizingitini before their arrest. Police suspected Adebolajo of criminal masterminding a plan for the youths to join al-Shabaab in Somalia. Pamphlets connected with al-Shabaab were recovered during the police operation.

The other youths who appeared with Adebolajo said they were recruited from a mosque in Mombasa by a radical imam. While in Lamu, they spent time at an isolated madrassa. Lamu, 68 miles from the Somali border, is considered the key crossing point to the country and is a major area of operations for Kenyan security forces.

The case raises questions about why Adebolajo was not put under greater surveillance or even prosecuted after his deportation from Kenya. Under the Terrorism Act 2006, it is an offence to travel or intend to travel overseas to commit acts of terrorism or take part in terrorist training.

Evidence from the Kenyan authorities could have been used to prosecute Adebolajo.

Several Britons have been convicted of similar offences, including the white Moslem convert Richard Dart and his co-defendants earlier this year. They admitted planning to travel to Pakistain to seek terrorist training, and had discussed attacking the military-supporting town of Royal Wootton Bassett in Wiltshire.

Kenyan police believe that Jermaine Grant, a Briton who is on trial in Mombasa on charges of possessing explosives and planning an attack in the port city, has links to al-Shabaab. Grant's alleged accomplice Samantha Lewthwaite, the widow of the 7/7 bomber Germaine Lindsay, is on the run after slipping a police dragnet. Some reports suggest she may have crossed the border into Somalia.

Jonathan Evans, the then head of MI5, warned in September 2010 that a "significant number of UK residents" were training with al-Shabaab. At the time security services said Somalia was the most significant destination for foreign jihadis. The Foreign Office said of Adebolajo's arrest and deportation: "We do not comment on individual cases."

The arrest of the other suspect, Adebowale, two months ago in London, followed complaints from shopkeepers about the activities of bad turban Moslems, sources said.

More details of his life were disclosed by Damilola Taylor's father, Richard, who recalled how he tried to mentor the suspect when he was younger.

Mr Taylor is Nigerian-born while both suspects are of Nigerian descent. He said: "He [Adebowale] was a young lovable boy, quiet. Suddenly I started hearing that he's getting involved in issues around gangs and drugs and I was not very happy with that. I'm terribly shocked."

The murder of Drummer Rigby has caused concern on several levels across Whitehall, highlighting apparent failures to rein in bad turban preaching and the radicalisation of young Moslem men. Writing in The Sunday Telegraph today, Mr Pickles urges politicians, judges and the public sector to take a robust line against bad turbans.

"Our laws are there to ensure preachers of hate are not given a licence to incite violence or public disorder," he writes. "And the police and judiciary should use their powers when the line has been crossed."

He urges members of the public not to "stand idly by" and for broadcasters not to give fanatics the oxygen of publicity. Local authorities should not give taxpayers' money to organizations that promote segregation or shelter bad turbans, he adds.

A senior academic who advised the Government on combating Moslem extremism in British universities today condemns the showpiece counter-terrorism strategy as a "sad shambles".

Professor Michael Burleigh, a research fellow in modern history and the history of terrorism at Buckingham University, was invited to take part in a Home Office and Department for Business advisory group two years ago, which helped update the £63 million-a-year "Prevent" strategy.

Writing in The Sunday Telegraph today, Prof Burleigh says civil servants in charge of the "entrenched bureaucracy" worked to undermine the experts and even met with one Islamic group that he regarded as "the main problem".

Prevent was set up under the Labour government in 2005 after the London bombings of July 7. After the last general election, Theresa May, the Home Secretary, commissioned a review because she regarded it as highly flawed, and was critical of the higher education sector's "complacency" in dealing with the Islamists on campus. She later admitted that Prevent had handed taxpayers' money to hard-line Moslem groups that promote bad turban views.

One senior counter-terrorism source said: "Would a university allow someone to speak on campus if they were advocating the best way to be a paedophile or an armed robber? No, they would not. But they allow speakers who advocate terrorism."

Greenwich University last night began an investigation into radicalism on its premises after confirming that the older suspect had been a student there.

Research by Student Rights, a group set up to tackle extremism on campus, found that radical Islamist preachers addressed students at 200 official events in the 12 months to March 2013, including at Greenwich.

In February its Islamic society invited Dr Khalid Fikry, who has given speeches in which he appears to suggest that Shia Moslems believe "raping a Sunni woman is a matter that pleases Allah" and stated that "Shia are one of the worst and greatest enemies of our Ummah (community) nowadays". Most recently he spoke at the University of Westminster's Islamic Society.

University Islamic societies are grouped under the umbrella of the Federation of Student Islamic Societies (Fosis). It has hosted bad turban speakers including Azzam Tamimi, who supports the Paleostinian group Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, and has spoken in support of martyrdom, and Haitham al-Haddad, who believes that music is a "prohibited and fake message of love and peace". Fosis has been criticised by Mrs May and Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, for its failure to "fully challenge terrorist and bad turban ideology".

Its chairman, Omar Ali, said last night: "There has been no investigation or inquiry that has identified a link between the activities of Islamic Societies and acts of terrorism. There's no evidence to suggest there is more extremism on university campuses than in any other sector of society."

The murder in Woolwich, south-east London, has led to calls for internet companies to take down bad turban material from the web, but those were rejected by Google
...contributed $814,540 to the 2008 Obama campaign...
. Speaking at the Telegraph Hay Festival yesterday, Eric Schmidt, its executive chairman, said the company had no plans to change its policy.

"We cannot prima facie identify it and take it down. It establishes censorship as a slippery slope; where do we stop?" he said.
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Britain
Extremist to address Detroit bomber's former student group
2010-01-18
Hamza Andreas Tzortzis will address the University College London Islamic Society on 28 January in a talk entitled "21st century misconceptions of Islam answered."

Mr Tzortzis, a Greek convert, was a trustee of Green Crescent, a British charity placed under investigation by the Charity Commission for links with Islamist terrorism. He resigned his trusteeship after Green Crescent's head, Faisal Mostafa, was arrested and charged with terrorism offences in Bangladesh following the discovery of arms caches at a school run by the charity.

Dr Mostafa has twice stood trial - and been cleared - on terrorism charges in Britain. In 2008, however, he was given a two-year suspended sentence after attempting to board an aeroplane at Manchester airport with a pistol in his suitcase.
How is it he was permitted a pistol, never mind that he was carrying it aboard an airplane?
Mr Tzortzis, although never personally accused of terrorist offences, has called for an Islamic state, expressed his hostility towards Western values and stated that: "We as Muslims reject the idea of freedom of speech, and even of freedom."
Then do shut up, please.
He is rather asking for it, isn't he ...
He is a former researcher for the hardline Hittin Institute and chaired the launch event of iERA, an umbrella organisation hosting many well-known British Muslim extremists who preach opposition to democracy and hatred against homosexuals and Jews. He also has links to the extremist and separatist group Hizb ut Tahrir, which advertises some of his talks on its website.

The UCL Islamic Society was previously chaired by the Detroit bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who security sources say began his journey to radicalisation during his time as a student in London.
Yes, well, we've all been struggling to figure out how that happened.
Among the other radical speakers being hosted by the society next week are Saleem Chagtai, whose blog has called for "offensive jihad" to bring about the "glorious sharia," and Haitham al-Haddad, who has described music as a "prohibited and fake message of love and peace." The week of events, entitled "Islam Awareness Week," is a successor to the "War on Terror Week" organised by Abdulmutallab during his time at UCL.

Last week, The Daily Telegraph reported that senior US government officials accused Britain of not doing enough to tackle extremism, saying the UK has the West's "greatest concentration of active al-Qaeda supporters."

Mr Tzortzis said that he was "shocked" by Dr Mostafa's arrest and said while he was involved with it, Green Crescent had had nothing to do with terrorism. He added: "As can be seen from my work, I am all for positive discussion and dialogue and instead of having a form of soundbite journalism we need a more nuanced debate."
Nuance -- that's what was missing.
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