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Britain
Former UK student union head sues body after being ousted for alleged antisemitism
2023-03-19
[IsraelTimes] Shaima Dallali’s lawyers argue she was removed because of ’antipathy’ to pro-Paleostinian views, Islamic faith, despite apologies and inquiry finding tweets were only ’discourteous’

The former head of the United Kingdom’s largest student representative body announced Friday that she is suing the union, claiming her removal after a months-long investigation into antisemitism allegations against her was discriminatory.

Shaima Dallali’s lawyers argued in a statement that the dismissal of the National Union of Students president was prompted by "antipathy" toward her pro-Paleostinian views and Islamic faith — protected under the UK’s Equality Act — and that the disciplinary process against her was unfair.

The statement said Dallali "was the subject of numerous complaints as well as personal abuse and threats, to the effect that her past articulation of her anti-Zionist beliefs amounted to antisemitism."

Dallali is seeking damages over her dismissal and has also launched an appeal against her removal through the NUS’s internal appeals procedure.

After Dallali’s election in March 2020, the Union of Jewish Students highlighted various anti-Israeli and allegedly antisemitic comments she is alleged to have made, including a post 10 years ago that read: "Khaybar Khaybar O Jews... Muhammad’s army will return Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamaswith about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response...
," referring to the Battle of Khaybar in 628 CE, during which Moslem troops reportedly attacked Jewish natives in the town of Khaybar. Dallali has since apologized for the social media post.

A probe was subsequently launched last year by Queen’s Counsel Rebecca Tuck into the claims. Dallali was then suspended from her position in August, then dismissed in November over her "unacceptable" comments and "significant breaches" of union policy, the NUS said.

Dallali’s lawyers claimed she was dismissed despite the inquiry determining that three of her posts were just "discourteous," while adding that she did not believe her "Khaybar Khaybar" tweet to be antisemitic when she wrote it.

The lawyers argued the process was unfair in several ways, charging that Dallali was denied legal representation in the proceedings, the NUS refused to read her written submissions, and did not facilitate witnesses to be called to support her defense.

The lawyers stressed that the ousted student union head "has apologized fully and repeatedly since, much as both before and during her tenure as president of the NUS she has repeatedly made clear her opposition to all forms of racism, including antisemitism while continuing to campaign to denounce the plight of the Paleostinian people."

"It is Ms. Dallali’s position that these four tweets patently did not amount to a dismissible offense and that there can be no rational explanation for dismissing her on this (or any other) basis," the statement read.

On Friday, an NUS spokesperson told the Jewish Chronicle that the group believed the probe to be "thorough and fair."

"There is no room for doubt that this process has been as robust as it gets. We understand the former president has now submitted employment tribunal proceedings," the spokesperson said.

"Our focus is to represent all students and to rebuild NUS to be an inclusive and progressive force for good. We are taking steps to enact our antisemitism action plan and to mobilize students to campaign for a better future," the NUS added.

NUS is a confederate association of around 600 students’ unions, representing more than seven million students.
Link


Britain
UK government suspends funding for national student union over alleged antisemitism
2022-05-15
[IsraelTimes] Ministers, former NUS presidents raise concerns about reported incidents ’over many years,’ following union’s election of new president accused of hatred

The British government announced Friday that it will back off from its affiliation with the UK National Union of Students (NUS) over allegations of antisemitism within the organization. UK Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawai said Friday the government’s funding of the organization will also be suspended until the allegations are "suitably addressed."

"Jewish students need to have confidence that this is a body that represents them, and we need to be sure that the student bodies that we engage with are speaking fairly for all students, which is why we are disengaging with the NUS until the issues have been addressed," Zahawi said.

Michelle Donelan, the minister for higher and further education in England, detailed her action against the organization.

"Enough is enough. I’ve prepared a package of sanctions against NUS following concerning incidents over many years," Donelan wrote Friday on Twitter. "Disappointed it has come to this but proud to stand up for Jewish students. NUS will not have a seat at the table until we see real change."

Dallali told the Guardian last month in an interview that she welcomed an ongoing investigation of antisemitism within the organization, which included a complaint about her own social media posts.

Matt Western, Labour’s shadow universities minister, said that it was crucial for Jewish students to feel safe and included in student organizations. "It is important that the NUS is listening, and I hope that the independent inquiry they have rightly set up resolves these issues to the satisfaction of all concerned," he said.

A spokesperson for NUS told UK media that it was unfortunate the government did not work with the union directly over the disengagement, but that it has opened an independent investigation to work with the Union of Jewish Students.

After Dallali’s election, the Union of Jewish Students highlighted various anti-Israeli and allegedly antisemitic comments she is alleged to have made, including a post 10 years ago that read: "Khaybar Khaybar O Jews... Muhammad’s army will return Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamaswith about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response...
," referring to the Battle of Khaybar in 628 CE, during which Moslem troops reportedly attacked Jewish natives in the town of Khaybar. Dallali has since apologized for the social media post.

Jewish students also raised concerns after the rapper Lowkey was invited to an NUS event, after he said in an online interview that the media had "weaponized the Jewish heritage of [Ukrainian president] Zelensky" in order to ignore alleged far-right activity in Ukraine.

When the Union of Jewish Students met with NUS over the planned event in March, the NUS stated that if the appearance was problematic, they were able to stay in a "safe space" designated for those who are sensitive to loud noise to avoid Lowkey’s concert, according to the Guardian. Lowkey ultimately canceled his appearance at the event.

The organization has had a long history of accusations of antisemitic remarks and exclusion of Jews from union activities.

In April more than 20 former presidents of the National Union of Students sent a letter to the organization’s trustees urging them to address the concerns of antisemitism, according to the Guardian.

NUS has previously faced criticism for omitting Judaism from a survey of members’ religions twice within a year. The form offered 11 options including Christian, Moslem, Buddhist, Hindu, Sikh, Agnostic and more, but neglected to mention Britannia’s fifth-largest religion. Former NUS president Shakira Martin apologized and promised to rectify the matter.

Martin was also reported to have signed the letter to the organization’s board in favor of addressing antisemitism.

Former president Malia Bouattia was accused in 2016 of antisemitic comments after she said Birmingham was "something of a Zionist outpost in British higher education." Britannia’s Newcastle University and Lincoln University voted to disaffiliate from the organization as a result.

Bouattia, an activist in the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, had allegedly advocated for Paleostinian violence against Israelis, and refused to condemn the Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not really Moslems....
terrorist group.

NUS is a confederate association of around 600 students’ unions, representing more than seven million students.
Related:
National Union of Students: 2017-07-06 UK: Salford U's Muslim student prez wants Islamic takeover and to “oppress white people”
National Union of Students: 2017-07-01 Palestine Expo given green light after banning threat by government
National Union of Students: 2016-04-21 Jungle Tales
Related:
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions: 2022-01-08 PA leader's son accused of aiding terrorism released from Egyptian jail
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions: 2022-01-04 Egypt releases Palestinian activist Ramy Shaath; set to deport him
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions: 2021-12-05 Democratic Socialists of America won’t expel Rep. Jamaal Bowman for trip to Israel
Link


Olde Tyme Religion
UK: Salford U's Muslim student prez wants Islamic takeover and to “oppress white people”
2017-07-06
[CreepingSharia] A Muslim student union leader has claimed she would like to ’oppress white people’ and has suggested there would be an Islamic takeover if more people read the Koran.

Zamzam Ibrahim, who was elected President of Salford University’s Student Union in March, also suggested friendship between men and women is un-Islamic and is opposed to the government’s anti-radicalisation strategy.

The Swedish-Somali student officer also described the government’s Prevent strategy as ’disastrous’ and ’racist’.

In one message she responded to a question on AskFM on what book everyone should read. She said: ’The Quaraan. We would have an Islamic takeover!’

In another message on the topic of the possibility of friendship between a man and a woman, she replied: ’I’ve had this debate with many friends! Maybe in some cases but Islamically it’s incorrect for girls to be friends with a guy anyway!

’So I’m gonna say NO not the kind of friendship they can have with the same gender there is always boundaries.’

In one tweet from May 9, 2012 under the hashtag #ifIwasPresident, she wrote: ’I’d oppress white people just to give them a taste of what they put us through!’

Ms Ibrahim was also recently elected to the National Union of Students Block of 15 committee.

She has also completed a BSc in Business and Financial Management.

During her campaign for election with the NUS, Ms Ibrahim, who is a Muslim, claimed: ’Since Brexit referendum result, there has been a rise in hate crime by 41 per cent. NUS needs to continue the great work on combating racist, xenophobic, misogynistic, homophobic and ableist hate crime.

’If elected, I will continue to work with NUS Officers and ARAF campaigns to develop networks to support students and activists affected by Hate Crime, to fight against the disastrous racist PREVENT strategy and support international students and migrant communities.’

The student union at the college ‐ where Manchester Arena bomber Salman Abedi attended ‐ is opposed to the government’s PREVENT strategy.

According to The Spectator, Ms Ibrahim has deleted a large number of messages form her social media accounts.

According to the Student’s Union: ’The government’s Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015 places a statutory requirement on public bodies ‐ including universities ‐ to "prevent people being drawn into terrorism".

One college source told MailOnline: ’Given that as Student Union President involved working with students of all all walks of life its a bit inappropriate for someone like her to hold the role of representing students.’

Salford Student’s Union said: ’There have been reports in the media this weekend related to comments made by the Union President, Zamzam Ibrahim.

’It is disappointing to see that comments from a number of years ago have been taken out of context, and used in a sensationalised story with no clear public interest. The Students’ Union is confident that the comments published this weekend are not a fair or true reflection of Zamzam’s current opinions or views, written when she was a young teenager, and were not intended to cause offence.

’Nevertheless, the Union takes all issues related to equality and diversity seriously and wishes to reassure students that the Union is committed to an inclusive and accessible campus environment for all, regardless of race, religion, gender or other personal characteristic. The Union ensures all student leaders and volunteers are trained and guided by our Equality and Diversity Policy and that all events, activities and projects are designed with this ethos in mind.’
Link


Britain
Palestine Expo given green light after banning threat by government
2017-07-01
Gotta keep up the national tradition. But it was nice to see it questioned, however briefly.
[IsraelTimes] Department for Local Government won’t stop event taking place, despite fears that its organisers have ties to terror groups.

A pro-Paleostine event due to be held in London will go ahead, despite government threats to ban it over alleged links to terror group Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason,.

The Paleostine Expo is expected to draw around 10,000 people to the Queen Elizabeth II Centre (QEII) in London, on the weekend of 8 and 9 July.

Earlier in the week, Communities Secretary Sajid Javid wrote a letter to organisers, Friends of Al Aqsa, to express concerns over their links to terror groups.

He is quoted in the Guardian as citing "concerns that your organization and those connected with it have expressed public support for a proscribed organization, namely Hamas, and that you have supported events at which Hamas and Hizballah ‐ also proscribed ‐ have been praised".

Speaking to Jewish News on Tuesday, Department for Communities and Local Government front man said: "We have worked with the QEII Centre to carry out checks following concerns raised about the Paleostine Expo 2017. Following these checks, we have agreed the event can take place as planned."

The event is billed as "the biggest social, cultural and entertainment event on Paleostine to ever take place in Europe", and will feature speakers including anti-Zionist Israeli-born speakers Ilan Pappe and Miko Peled, journalists Ben White and Peter Oborne, and controversial former National Union of Students president Malia Bouattia.

Also appearing is Iyad Burnat, who has previously been denied entry to the UK, and John Pilger documentary maker and journalist from Australia. When Burnat was turned away from Britannia in September 2016, he blamed the "Zionist lobby" and pointed to an article about his planned visit in Jewish News.
Link


Britain
Jungle Tales
2016-04-21
Britain's National Union of Students (NUS) elected a new president who has been criticized for her anti-Israel views, and argued against an amendment to commemorate the Holocaust on campuses on the same day, British media reported on Wednesday.

Malia Bouattia, NUS's first black Muslim woman president, has been heavily chastised for her controversial opinions.
But got elected anyway...
In a 2011 blog post for a Friends of Palestine campaign, Bouattia called Birmingham University "a Zionist outpost." Bouattia also did not initially support a motion condemning ISIS as a terror organization, according to BBC.
Link


Britain
Dupe URL: Muslims demand Sharia student loans because paying interest goes against Islamic law
2011-08-25
Muslim groups are calling for a separate student loan system because the interest due to be charged will conflict with rules of Sharia law.

The changes to tuition fees, which come into force next year, will see students charged higher rates of interest on the loans they take out to pay for university. Until now they have paid the market rate of inflation but the reforms mean students who go on to earn more than £21,000 will have to pay interest of up to 3 per cent.

But in some interpretations of Sharia law, which is Islam's legal system and governs every aspect of Muslim life, loans are forbidden.

The National Union of Students has said it could be two years before an alternative system is worked out, leaving some Muslims fearing they cannot go on to further education.

The Federation of Student Islamic Societies told The Independent that the rate increase was a 'pressing issue'. A spokesman said: 'Because the rate of interest is above the rate of inflation, it is quite blatant usury.'

Mohammed Ahmed-Sheikh, 17, says the changes will discourage him from applying to university next year. 'The fees are the reason I'm having doubts. I'm Muslim and loans are against my religion,' he told The Independent.
Then get a job and save up. Really, this isn't rocket science.
Ahmad Mitoubsi, 21, who graduated this year, added: 'We've just had to adapt to the British system or else I couldn't have gone to uni.'

The Department of Business, Innovation and Skills says discussions are ongoing with student groups about a solution. But it is thought an alternative, such as already happens with mortgages in which education could be 'rented' instead, may not be agreed until the 2013/14 academic year.
Link


Africa Subsaharan
Fresh arrests and heavy security deter new Swazi protests
2011-04-15
[The Nation (Nairobi)] Fresh arrests today and a heavy police presence in Swaziland's main city Manzini headed off new protests against King Mswati III, Africa's last absolute monarch.

Activists had vowed to return to the streets today, one day after mass arrests, teargas and water cannons broke up a protest by 1,000 teachers and students in Manzini.

Maxwell Dlamini, president of the Swaziland National Union of Students, said a strong police presence had prevented people from gathering for the march.

"We have adopted a wait and see attitude, we are studying the situation," he said.

Sibongile Mazibuko, of the Swaziland National Association of Teachers, said union leaders would meet later today to decide how to proceed.

Making a decision
"We are in a process of making a decision. Some still want to press ahead with the protest," she said.

Two protest leaders were placed in durance vile in raids this morning, with one kept under house arrest, according to Sipho Kunene, leader of the Swaziland Federation of Labour.

Police patrolled Manzini, arresting people in groups, including four teachers who were speaking to an AFP journalist in a cafe.

"We are not used to seeing so many soldiers. People are afraid of walking to town. I am afraid this is going to affect business," said one Manzini resident, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
.
On Tuesday, police used tear gas and water cannons to disperse some 1,000 teachers and students marching to the main city of Manzini, then stormed the teachers' union offices when the group sought refuge there.

At least 100 people were jugged, including top labour and civil society leaders, according to union leaders.

Prime Minister Barnabas Dlamini, a staunch royalist, has banned the protest, which began as a Facebook campaign modelled on uprisings in north Africa.

Setting up roadblocks
Police began setting up roadblocks late last week and have raided the homes of activists.

Most top union leaders who had been jugged have now been released, according to Dlamini, who was held from Sunday to Tuesday.

The king has not spoken publicly about the protests, but sent his top advisers to meet with union leaders last week in a failed bid to convince them to drop the protest plan.

With 13 wives and a fortune estimated at $100 million, Mswati is ranked by Forbes magazine as among the 15 richest monarchs in the world.

But nearly 70 per cent of Swazis live on less than a dollar a day, the unemployment rate is 40 per cent, and 25 per cent of adults have HIV, the highest rate in the world. Life expectancy is the lowest in the world, at 32.5 years.
Link


Britain
Brit colleges refuse to spy on Muslim students
2007-05-31
LONDON — Teaching staff at various universities and colleges in Britain oppose the government order to report the activities of Muslim students who could be suspected of Islamic radicalism.

The Department for Education and Skills has asked higher education staff to report about "suspects" in the classes as a mean to stem terrorism on campuses. The annual conference of the University and College Union (UCU) passed a motion against the government order. Supporters of the motion say though they would report illegal activity, they cannot act as detectives.
They didn't ask you to act as detectives, they asked you to report illegal and suspicious activity.
The motion, put forward by university lecturers in London, warns that such a move would damage the trust between staff and students.
What about the students who would feel safer if the crazies were reported?
In November, the government warned of the dangers posed by what it described as the serious threat posed by radical Muslims. However, many lecturers are unhappy about the role of monitoring, describing it as Islamophobia and a witch-hunt.
Totally forgotten about 9/11. Or they never cared to begin with.
The Department for Education and Skills insists the new guidance is not about targeting Muslim students and says it decided to issue the advice after discussions with universities, Muslim students and law enforcement agencies.

"Academic freedom is something they hold very close to their hearts, it is an absolute key to their profession," Sally Hunt, general secretary of the UCU which represents 120,000 college staff, told BBC. "You cannot make it possible for students to explore ideas, if, at the same time, you prescribe how they do that."
It's really hard to have academic freedom if you're afraid someone's going to pull the string on a boom vest, or shoot up the tube station.
When the government advice was issued, a statement from the National Union of Students, University College Union, Unison, the Federation of Student Islamic Societies and the Equality Challenge Unit said: "Any implementation should recognise that demonising Muslims is unacceptable and dangerous — whether in educational institutions or in communities.

"Students and staff should be assured by their institutions that there is no intention of adding to a climate of Islamophobia."
'Islamophobia' is a code phrase for "we don't want to be involved." Invoke it and you're justified doing nothing.
Universities UK said violence had no place on university campuses but also hit out at the singling out of Muslims as a group in the guidance. It pointed out that its earlier guidance on tackling the issue focused on "all kinds of extremism, not just extremism in the name of Islam".
If you encounter suspicious activity by a group of radicalized, violent Quakers, by all means phone it in.
"Universities are some of the most diverse communities in the UK, and work hard to ensure community cohesion on campus across all faiths and racial groups," the university umbrella group said in a statement.
Unless you're a Christian or a conservative. Try it in the U.S. and see.
UCU joint general secretary Paul Mackney said universities needed straight-forward procedures on what to do if anyone suspects violent extremism or terrorist activity. He added: "But radicalism must not be conflated with terrorism. Institutions must maintain a moderating environment where discussion flourishes."
Except if that discussion offends someone.

This is an idiotic issue. No one in the Brit government is trying to suppress speech, and the local anarchists will remain free to blabber their goofy spew. But amongst the many decent folk at a typical university are a few that are using said institution as a cover for activities that aren't generally synonymous with education, such as bombings, revolution and terrorism. It's not a sin to call the authorities when you suspect those things. It's really not.
Intelligence and security expert Professor Anthony Glees, who published a report last year warning of the risks of students being radicalised, said he believed there should be far more checks on students from abroad. The BBC earlier reported that the radicalisation of students by Islamist groups was a growing problem on some university campuses. Senior academics warned that the authorities were doing little to tackle the problem.

But the Federation of Student Islamic Societies insists radicalism is not widespread.
Of course he insists that. He's on the other side!
Head of student affairs Faisal Hanjra said he believed such a step was not generally useful because it tended to exaggerate the threat and blow the issue out of proportion.
Link


Britain
Islamists infiltrate 4 UK universities
2006-11-13
Islamic extremists have infiltrated at least four British universities to radicalise Muslim students, says a “troubleshooting” imam who sends teams to campuses to tackle indoctrination, The Sunday Times reported. Sheikh Musa Admani believes fundamentalists are bypassing campus bans on groups with radical links by presenting themselves as “ordinary Muslims” to fellow students or forming societies with alternative names. Some students, says Admani, have been so deeply indoctrinated that they are close to travelling to Afghanistan and Iraq to engage in jihad, the report said.

Admani, a Muslim chaplain at London Metropolitan University, runs a charity that helps to rehabilitate young men who have fallen prey to extremism. He is also an adviser on Muslim affairs to Bill Rammell, the higher education minister. “We are dealing with people filled with hatred,” said Admani. “It’s hatred for the white man and the West in particular, because they have read the works of Qutb and Maududi (Islamist ideologues followed by Al Qaeda) who set Muslims apart from everyone else.”

Admani’s charity, the Luqman Institute of Education and Development, has been tackling the effects of this indoctrination by sending volunteers to campuses to challenge “the warped view of Islam” spread by extremists. The charity has received reports from students about fundamentalists operating in at least four UK institutions: Brunel University, west London, Bedfordshire University, Luton, Sheffield Hallam University and Manchester Metropolitan University. Up to 10 students at Brunel are being “deradicalised” by a caseworker from the institute, the newspaper said.

Jawad Syed, who nearly succumbed to extremism himself when he was a Brunel student, said: “Some of the students are watching jihadi videos and might be listening to different sheikhs encouraging jihad.”

Earlier this year the Islamic society at Sheffield Hallam University hosted a lecture by Sheikh Khalid Yasin, an American preacher who favours the death penalty for homosexuals. Shakeel Begg, another radical cleric, recently urged students at Kingston University, southwest London, to wage jihad in Palestine. British-born Asif Hanif, who killed three people in a suicide attack on a bar in Tel Aviv, Israel, in 2003, had attended Kingston.

Admani said some extremists win their peers’ trust in university prayer rooms before inviting them to off-campus lectures. In other cases, groups banned by the National Union of Students are thought to be operating under alternative names. Last month students at Staffordshire University were invited to attend a discussion entitled “The true word of God: the Quran or the Bible”. The event was addressed by a former member of Al-Muhajiroun, a proscribed organisation.

A further twist on extremism and campus life emerged in court last week when it was revealed that Dhiren Barot, the most senior Al-Qaeda plotter to be captured in Britain, had used a forged pass to carry out research at Brunel.
Link


Europe
French PM to announce changes to youth job contract
2006-04-10
French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin will announce on Monday how the government plans to revise an unpopular youth job contract in the hope of bringing more than one month of mass protests and strikes to an end. Villepin is to present President Jacques Chirac with the "agreed position" of the ruling UMP party on changes to the First Job Contract (CPE) at 8:30 a.m., sources at the presidency said. After the meeting Villepin will make an announcement at 10:30 a.m., his office said in a statement that gave no further details.

The "easy hire, easy fire" law allows firms to fire workers under 26 without giving a reason during a two-year trial period but it has proved highly unpopular, provoking a series of mass marches and national strikes. Unions, who want the CPE repealed because it removes job security for young people hired under the contract, threatened on Sunday to extend their protests unless Chirac provides a clear solution to a crisis that has weakened his prime minister. "If tomorrow the message isn't clear, the order of the day will be new action ... before May 1," said Annick Coupe, national representative of the Solidaires union.

Backers of the contract say it will help reduce France's 22 percent youth unemployment by helping employers bypass laws that make it hard to lay off workers -- something often cited by firms as a disincentive for taking on new hires. Students are planning fresh protest marches on Tuesday. "We need a clear response on the part of the government and the president of the republic, which is to say the withdrawal of the CPE, pure and simple," Bruno Julliard, president of the French National Union of Students, told LCI television.
Link


Britain
Hard boyz recruiting at UK universities
2005-09-16
A new report has claimed that extremist organisations and terror groups are operating in universities across the UK. Education secretary Ruth Kelly earlier told universities to clamp down on student extremists in the wake of the London terror attacks. But a report due to be published next week claims more than 30 institutions across the country have had "extremist and/or terror groups" detected in them, according to The Guardian. The institutions include Oxford and Cambridge Universities and the London School of Economics (LSE).

Anthony Glees, the director of Brunel University's centre for intelligence and security studies and author of the report, told the paper: "This is a serious threat. We have discovered a number of universities where subversive activities are taking place, often without the knowledge of the university authorities." The report says the Islamist groups Hizb ut-Tahrir and al-Muhajiroun (which was thought to have disbanded) are active at several universities despite being subject to a "no-platform policy" by the National Union of Students.

The BNP was found to be active at Cambridge University, animal rights extremists at Oxford, and Islamic extremist groups at the LSE and Manchester University. Ms Kelly said that vice-chancellors must inform the police when they suspect students or staff of engaging in "unacceptable behaviour". University leaders expressed concern over being asked to "police" their students but accepted that the terrorist threat could not be ignored.
University "leaders" used to be expected to be "in charge" of their institutions...
Ms Kelly told the annual conference of Universities UK: "Following the London bomb attacks in July, we are all having to re-examine certain policies. One is how to respond to those using the freedoms of our society to promote terrorism and violence." Her remarks had a special resonance as she spoke at Universities UK's London headquarters in Tavistock Square, the scene of the July 7 bus bombing.
Link


Britain
Hizb-ut-Tahrir's secret plan to recruit UK students
2005-09-05
A leading radical Islamist group which Tony Blair wants to ban is recruiting "vulnerable" young Muslim students at British universities under several cover names, The Independent on Sunday can reveal. Hizb ut-Tahrir, banned from campuses by the National Union of Students, has set up front organisations at more than a dozen universities with innocuous-sounding names such as the Ideological Society, the Millennium Forum and the New World Society.

They have secured access to freshers' fairs across the country and will receive funding from student unions to help them operate. Muslim student leaders warned that Hizb would target "vulnerable" young Muslims when the new university term starts later this month. "Before, we could stop the recruitment; we could save vulnerable people," said Faisal Hanjra, a spokesman for the Federation of Student Islamic Societies. "Now, we have no idea who is targeting whom." Hizb failed to respond when approached for comment.

News of the plan by the militant Hizb to set up front organisations comes as police and intelligence agencies scrutinise a videotape which associates al-Qa'ida with the London suicide bombings on 7 July, in which 52 commuters died. The warning of "war" from Mohammed Sidique Khan, the presumed leader of the bombers, has emphasised the danger that other British-born Muslims will be recruited for terrorism. Hizb ut-Tahrir and another extreme group, al-Muhajiroun, face being banned under measures the Government has proposed in the wake of the attacks. Although both deny supporting violence, they are accused of radicalising young Muslims to the point where they attract the attention of terrorist recruiters.
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