Michael Ejercito
2017-08-11 17:05:36 UTC
UK: Still Welcoming Jihadis
by Douglas Murray
August 11, 2017 at 5:00 am
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10790/britain-welcoming-jihadis
What excuse is there in a country which has now seen and suffered the
effects of Islamist terror so many times, a country that the Prime Minister
has claimed has had "enough" of this terror, for precisely the same two
clerics to return to the UK for another tour?
On their visit to the UK last summer, the two clerics were allowed to talk
at mosques up and down the UK, including in Prime Minister Theresa May's own
constituency. By way of explanation, as the imam of the Madina Mosque and
Islamic Centre in Oldham, Zahoor Chishti, said of the two clerics, "They
have got hundreds of thousands of followers in the UK." For his part, the
son of the murdered Punjab Province Governor Salman Taseer, Shahbaz Taseer,
criticised the UK authorities for letting people who praised the murderer of
his father into the UK.
Last year, members of the British government could have claimed to have been
ignorant of the views of these two clerics. They could have pretended that
they did not know that they were allowing into the UK two men principally
known for encouraging the murder of apostates. They could have pretended to
have been ignorant of the beliefs of two men who like to whip up crowds to
praise murderers. But they cannot be unaware this year. So what are the
excuses for letting them in? Are there any?
The British Prime Minister's June declaration, that when it came to
terrorism in the UK, "enough is enough", already looks like little more than
rhetoric. If members of the British government want to move on from rhetoric
to action, however, they need to do more than just work out what new things
are going wrong in British counter-extremism policy. They will need to
identify the mistakes they keep on making, and perhaps try to avoid making
them yet again. Bewilderingly, a remarkable opportunity to learn a lesson
appears to have been missed yet again.
At almost precisely this time last year, two clerics from Pakistan toured
the UK. Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman and Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman are well-known
clerics in their native country. Not the least of the reasons for their
fame -- or notoriety -- is that they took a particularly strong line on the
issue of Mumtaz Qadri. He is the man who in 2011 murdered Salman Taseer, the
governor of the Punjab province in Pakistan. Taseer had gained attention for
taking a brave public stance in opposition to his country's strict blasphemy
laws -- often used as a pretext to persecute religious minorities, including
Muslim religious minorities, in Pakistan. Such laws have recently been used
against a Christian, Asia Bibi, who has now been imprisoned under a death
sentence for seven years because of allegations made against her by a Muslim
woman: that she drank from the same water as Muslims. The case of Asia Bibi
was one of the injustices which Taseer had highlighted. Because of Taseer's
vocal opposition to such laws, Mumtaz Qadri (who had been employed to act as
one of the governor's bodyguards) evidently decided that Taseer was an
apostate. In January 2011, Qadri murdered the man he was employed to look
after.
Qadri's action were hugely divisive both in Pakistan and in the global
Pakistani diaspora. After a trial that same year, Qadri was found guilty of
the murder and sentenced to death -- a sentence that was carried out in
February 2016.
That event brings us back to the two clerics, Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman and
Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman. After Qadri's conviction, on at least one occasion
Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman delivered a hysterical speech supporting the murder
of Taseer, while his fellow cleric, Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman, looked on
approvingly from the platform. The video of this occasion has now been
removed from YouTube, where it had previously been hosted.
While his fellow Pakistani cleric, Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman, delivered a
hysterical speech supporting the murder of Salman Taseer, governor of Punjab
province, Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman (pictured above at an unrelated event in
2011) looked on approvingly from the platform. (Image source: US Embassy
Pakistan)
Meanwhile, here is Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman after the funeral of the murderer
Mumtaz Qadri in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, whipping up a vast crowd of mourners.
During the speech, he repeatedly refers to Qadri as a shaheed [martyr]. This
was after tens of thousands of people attended Qadri's funeral, and
afterwards rioted, chanting slogans such as "Qadri, your blood will bring
the revolution" and "the punishment for a blasphemer is beheading" -- and
then murdered the human rights attorney who had defended Taseer.
After Qadri's execution, Haseeb ur Rehman also declared on social media that
"'Every person who loves Islam and Prophet is in grief for the martyrdom of
Mumtaz Qadri."
So, these are two clerics whom the British government thought appropriate to
let into the UK. The British government has previously made it clear that
entry to the UK is not a right of absolutely everyone in the world, and that
under certain conditions (especially if the individuals may be thought to
contribute to a breach of the peace) the government can bar people from
entry. Nevertheless, on their visit to the UK last summer, the two clerics
were allowed to talk at mosques up and down the UK, including in Prime
Minister Theresa May's own constituency. By way of explanation, as the imam
of the Madina Mosque and Islamic Centre in Oldham, Zahoor Chishti, said of
the two clerics, "They have got hundreds of thousands of followers in the
UK."
For his part, the son of the murdered Governor Salman Taseer, Shahbaz
Taseer, criticised the UK authorities for letting people who praised the
murderer of his father into the UK:
"These people teach murder and hate. For me personally I find it sad that a
country like England would allow cowards like these men in. It's countries
like the UK and the US that claim they are leading the way in the war
against terror [and] setting a standard. Why are they allowing people [in]
that give fuel to the fire they are fighting against?"
On that occasion it was perhaps possible to claim that the UK government
were ignorant about whom they were allowing into the UK. If so, they could
not claim to be once the men were in the country. Here at Gatestone, among
other places, the government was warned about the two clerics and informed
about their extremism.
What excuse is there in a country which has now seen and suffered the
effects of Islamist terror so many times, a country that the Prime Minister
has claimed has had "enough" of this terror, for precisely the same two
clerics to return to the UK for another tour? And not just to return but to
take part in a meeting of faith leaders in Oldham which claimed to be
organised with an intention to "bring communities together and address
terrorism"? That engagement (which took place at the end of last month)
turns out to have been just one more meeting in another tour of the UK and
Europe -- this one lasting up until August 27.
Last year, members of the British government could have claimed to have been
ignorant of the views of these two clerics. They could have pretended that
they did not know that they were allowing into the UK two men principally
known for encouraging the murder of apostates. They could have pretended to
have been ignorant of the beliefs of two men who like to whip up crowds to
praise murderers. They could have been unaware that such people were going
to speak to thousands of UK Muslims. But they cannot be unaware this year.
So what are the excuses for letting them in? Are there any? Or are the words
of elected officials in Britain just words today?
Douglas Murray, British author, commentator and public affairs analyst, is
based in London, England.
Follow Douglas Murray on Twitter
by Douglas Murray
August 11, 2017 at 5:00 am
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10790/britain-welcoming-jihadis
What excuse is there in a country which has now seen and suffered the
effects of Islamist terror so many times, a country that the Prime Minister
has claimed has had "enough" of this terror, for precisely the same two
clerics to return to the UK for another tour?
On their visit to the UK last summer, the two clerics were allowed to talk
at mosques up and down the UK, including in Prime Minister Theresa May's own
constituency. By way of explanation, as the imam of the Madina Mosque and
Islamic Centre in Oldham, Zahoor Chishti, said of the two clerics, "They
have got hundreds of thousands of followers in the UK." For his part, the
son of the murdered Punjab Province Governor Salman Taseer, Shahbaz Taseer,
criticised the UK authorities for letting people who praised the murderer of
his father into the UK.
Last year, members of the British government could have claimed to have been
ignorant of the views of these two clerics. They could have pretended that
they did not know that they were allowing into the UK two men principally
known for encouraging the murder of apostates. They could have pretended to
have been ignorant of the beliefs of two men who like to whip up crowds to
praise murderers. But they cannot be unaware this year. So what are the
excuses for letting them in? Are there any?
The British Prime Minister's June declaration, that when it came to
terrorism in the UK, "enough is enough", already looks like little more than
rhetoric. If members of the British government want to move on from rhetoric
to action, however, they need to do more than just work out what new things
are going wrong in British counter-extremism policy. They will need to
identify the mistakes they keep on making, and perhaps try to avoid making
them yet again. Bewilderingly, a remarkable opportunity to learn a lesson
appears to have been missed yet again.
At almost precisely this time last year, two clerics from Pakistan toured
the UK. Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman and Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman are well-known
clerics in their native country. Not the least of the reasons for their
fame -- or notoriety -- is that they took a particularly strong line on the
issue of Mumtaz Qadri. He is the man who in 2011 murdered Salman Taseer, the
governor of the Punjab province in Pakistan. Taseer had gained attention for
taking a brave public stance in opposition to his country's strict blasphemy
laws -- often used as a pretext to persecute religious minorities, including
Muslim religious minorities, in Pakistan. Such laws have recently been used
against a Christian, Asia Bibi, who has now been imprisoned under a death
sentence for seven years because of allegations made against her by a Muslim
woman: that she drank from the same water as Muslims. The case of Asia Bibi
was one of the injustices which Taseer had highlighted. Because of Taseer's
vocal opposition to such laws, Mumtaz Qadri (who had been employed to act as
one of the governor's bodyguards) evidently decided that Taseer was an
apostate. In January 2011, Qadri murdered the man he was employed to look
after.
Qadri's action were hugely divisive both in Pakistan and in the global
Pakistani diaspora. After a trial that same year, Qadri was found guilty of
the murder and sentenced to death -- a sentence that was carried out in
February 2016.
That event brings us back to the two clerics, Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman and
Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman. After Qadri's conviction, on at least one occasion
Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman delivered a hysterical speech supporting the murder
of Taseer, while his fellow cleric, Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman, looked on
approvingly from the platform. The video of this occasion has now been
removed from YouTube, where it had previously been hosted.
While his fellow Pakistani cleric, Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman, delivered a
hysterical speech supporting the murder of Salman Taseer, governor of Punjab
province, Muhammad Naqib ur Rehman (pictured above at an unrelated event in
2011) looked on approvingly from the platform. (Image source: US Embassy
Pakistan)
Meanwhile, here is Hassan Haseeb ur Rehman after the funeral of the murderer
Mumtaz Qadri in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, whipping up a vast crowd of mourners.
During the speech, he repeatedly refers to Qadri as a shaheed [martyr]. This
was after tens of thousands of people attended Qadri's funeral, and
afterwards rioted, chanting slogans such as "Qadri, your blood will bring
the revolution" and "the punishment for a blasphemer is beheading" -- and
then murdered the human rights attorney who had defended Taseer.
After Qadri's execution, Haseeb ur Rehman also declared on social media that
"'Every person who loves Islam and Prophet is in grief for the martyrdom of
Mumtaz Qadri."
So, these are two clerics whom the British government thought appropriate to
let into the UK. The British government has previously made it clear that
entry to the UK is not a right of absolutely everyone in the world, and that
under certain conditions (especially if the individuals may be thought to
contribute to a breach of the peace) the government can bar people from
entry. Nevertheless, on their visit to the UK last summer, the two clerics
were allowed to talk at mosques up and down the UK, including in Prime
Minister Theresa May's own constituency. By way of explanation, as the imam
of the Madina Mosque and Islamic Centre in Oldham, Zahoor Chishti, said of
the two clerics, "They have got hundreds of thousands of followers in the
UK."
For his part, the son of the murdered Governor Salman Taseer, Shahbaz
Taseer, criticised the UK authorities for letting people who praised the
murderer of his father into the UK:
"These people teach murder and hate. For me personally I find it sad that a
country like England would allow cowards like these men in. It's countries
like the UK and the US that claim they are leading the way in the war
against terror [and] setting a standard. Why are they allowing people [in]
that give fuel to the fire they are fighting against?"
On that occasion it was perhaps possible to claim that the UK government
were ignorant about whom they were allowing into the UK. If so, they could
not claim to be once the men were in the country. Here at Gatestone, among
other places, the government was warned about the two clerics and informed
about their extremism.
What excuse is there in a country which has now seen and suffered the
effects of Islamist terror so many times, a country that the Prime Minister
has claimed has had "enough" of this terror, for precisely the same two
clerics to return to the UK for another tour? And not just to return but to
take part in a meeting of faith leaders in Oldham which claimed to be
organised with an intention to "bring communities together and address
terrorism"? That engagement (which took place at the end of last month)
turns out to have been just one more meeting in another tour of the UK and
Europe -- this one lasting up until August 27.
Last year, members of the British government could have claimed to have been
ignorant of the views of these two clerics. They could have pretended that
they did not know that they were allowing into the UK two men principally
known for encouraging the murder of apostates. They could have pretended to
have been ignorant of the beliefs of two men who like to whip up crowds to
praise murderers. They could have been unaware that such people were going
to speak to thousands of UK Muslims. But they cannot be unaware this year.
So what are the excuses for letting them in? Are there any? Or are the words
of elected officials in Britain just words today?
Douglas Murray, British author, commentator and public affairs analyst, is
based in London, England.
Follow Douglas Murray on Twitter