Soeren Kern
"Britain
remains the world's leading recruiting ground for al-Qaeda." — Con
Coughlin, Daily Telegraph.
When
she sought help from the police and a lawyer, "the family of the
defendants were insulted that she had gone to the law. They wanted her back
within the family fold... Therefore, it was decided that she should be forced
to comply or be killed." — Prosecutor of Ahmed A-Khatib, who murdered his
wife for becoming "too westernized."
British
school teachers are afraid to teach their students about Christianity out of
fear of offending Muslims. — Roger Bolton, BBC Radio 4's Feedback program.
Rather
than taking steps to protect British children, police, social workers,
teachers... and the media deliberately played down the severity of the crimes
[of Muslim sexual grooming gangs] in order to avoid being accused of
"Islamophobia" or racism. — From the report "Easy Meat:
Multiculturalism, Islam and Child Sex Slavery."
A
group of British lawyers launched a website, Sharia Watch UK. The group called
Sharia law "Britain's Blind Spot.
After
Adebolajo, who murdered and tried to behead British soldier Lee Rigby with a
meat cleaver, was given a "whole-life" prison term, his brother said
his sibling was the victim of "Islamophobia."
"The
problem of honor-based violence and forced marriages in England is "worse
than people think." — Claire Phillipson, Wearside Women in Need.
The
Muslim population of Britain reached 3.4 million in 2014 to become around 5.3%
of the overall population of 64 million, according to figures extrapolated from a recent study on the growth of the Muslim population in
Europe. In real terms, Britain has the third-largest Muslim population in the
European Union, after France and Germany.
Islam
and Islam-related issues were omnipresent in Britain during 2014, and can be
categorized into four broad themes: 1) Islamic extremism and the security
implications of British jihadists in Syria; 2) the continuing spread of Islamic
Sharia law in Britain; 3) the sexual exploitation of British children by Muslim
gangs; and 4) Muslim integration into British society.
What
follows is a chronological review of some of the main stories involving the
rise of Islam in Britain during 2014.
In January,
an analysis of census data showed that nearly 10% of the babies and toddlers in England and Wales
are Muslim. The percentage of Muslims among children under five is almost twice
as high as in the general population. By way of comparison, fewer than one in
200 people over the age of 85 are Muslim, an indication of the extent to which
the birth rate is changing the religious demographic in Britain.
Also
in January, Muslim fundamentalists threatened to behead a fellow British Muslim after he posted an innocuous
image of Mohammed and Jesus on his Twitter account. The death threats against
Maajid Nawaz, a Liberal Democrat Party candidate for British Parliament, added
to the growing number of cases in which Islamists are using intimidation
tactics to restrict the free speech rights of fellow Muslims in Europe.
On
January 16, a Muslim woman was arrested by counter-terrorism police at Heathrow Airport as she was
preparing to board a flight to Turkey. Nawal Masaad, 26, is accused of trying
to smuggle £16,500 ($27,000; €20,000) in her underwear to jihadists in Syria.
She and her alleged co-conspirator, Amal El-Wahabi, 27—a Moroccan who does not
work and claims British social welfare benefits for herself and two young
sons—were the first British women to be charged with terrorism offenses linked
to the conflict in Syria.
On
January 23, the head of Scotland Yard's counter-terrorism unit, Commander
Richard Walton, revealed that 14 British minors were arrested on charges linked to the
Syrian conflict in January alone, compared to 24 for the whole of 2013. He said
it was "almost inevitable" that some fighters would try to mount
attacks in Britain upon their return.
On
January 16, British Islamist Abu Waleed outlined his
vision of an Islamic state in Britain, and called for Christians to be
humiliated so that they would convert to Islam. In a video, he said:
"If
the Muslim sees a kaffir [non-Muslim] with nice clothes, the kaffir has to take
his clothes off and give them to the Muslim. The kaffir, when he walks down the
street, he has to wear a red belt around his neck, and he has to have his
forehead shaved, and he has to wear two shoes that are different from one
another. He [the non-believer] is not allowed to walk on the pavement, he has
to walk in the middle of the road, and he has to ride a mule. That is, my dear
brothers, the Islamic state."
In
Bristol, the city council approved a controversial plan to convert a former comedy club into a
mosque. In Cambridgeshire, a Muslim group submitted plans to convert a warehouse into a new mosque. In Cambridge,
locals opposed a plan to build a £17.5 million ($28.5 million; €21 million)
mega-mosque, claiming it could be "a front for terrorism." In
Blackburn, home to nearly 100 mosques, city councilors were urged to reject a plan to open a mosque in a residential neighborhood.
In
Southend, local residents celebrated after a four-year battle resulted in the closing of an illegal
mosque. In Newton Mearns, south of Glasgow, plans were abandoned to build a mosque within the grounds of a school in one of the
most affluent suburbs of Scotland, due to local criticism of the move.
In
Catherine-de-Barnes, a tiny village in western central England, local residents objected to plans for a large, Muslim-only cemetery, which will include
space for 4,000 followers of Islam to be buried, and 75 parking spaces for
visitors. The village has a population of just 613, which means the cemetery
could eventually hold six-and-a-half times as many people as
Catherine-de-Barnes itself.
In February,
official statistics showed that net immigration to the United Kingdom surged to 212,000 in
the year ending September 2013, a significant increase from 154,000 in the
previous year. The new immigration data cast doubt on a pledge by Prime
Minister David Cameron to get net migration—the difference between the number
of people entering Britain and those leaving—down to the "tens of
thousands" before the general election in May 2015.
Separately,
data released by the National Crime Agency showed a 155% rise in British children groomed by sex gangs during 2013.
Also
in January, a Muslim extremist who hacked a soldier to death on a London street in May 2013, launched a taxpayer-funded appeal against his murder conviction. Michael
Adebolajo, 29, who tried to behead the British soldier Lee Rigby with a meat
cleaver, maintained that he should not have been convicted because he is a
"soldier of Allah" and therefore Rigby's killing was an act of war
rather than premeditated murder.
Adebolajo
and his co-defendant, Michael Adebowale, 22, were found guilty by a jury in
December 2013, and were sentenced on February 26.
Adebolajo was given a "whole-life" prison term and Adebowale was
given a minimum term of 45 years. Adebolajo's brother said his sibling was the victim of "Islamophobia."
On
February 16, The Sunday Times reported that about 250 British jihadists who went to train and fight in
Syria had returned to the UK and were being monitored by the security services.
Senior officials said the high number of "returnees"—five times the
figure that had been previously reported—underlined the growing danger posed by
"extremist tourists" going to the war-torn region. MI5 and police
said they feared that "returnees" could be preparing a Mumbai-style
gun attack on civilians, possibly in a crowded public place in London.
On
February 14, three Muslim vigilantes who terrorized innocent members of the
public as the self-styled "Muslim Patrol" were banned from promoting Sharia Law in Britain for a period of five years.
In March,
British authorities launched an investigation into the source of a document that purportedly
outlined a plot by Muslim fundamentalists to Islamize public schools in England
and Wales. The four-page document described a strategy—dubbed Operation Trojan
Horse—to oust non-Muslim head teachers and staff at state schools in Muslim neighborhoods
and replace them with individuals who would run the schools according to strict
Islamic principles.
Also
in March, a report entitled, "Easy Meat: Multiculturalism, Islam and Child
Sex Slavery,"showed how officials in England and Wales were aware of rampant child
grooming—the process by which sexual predators befriend and build trust with
children in order to prepare them for abuse—by Muslim gangs since at least
1988. Rather than taking steps to protect British children, however, police,
social workers, teachers, neighbors, politicians and the media deliberately
downplayed the severity of the crimes perpetrated by the grooming gangs in
order to avoid being accused of "Islamophobia" or racism.
Meanwhile,
official figures revealed that record levels of Muslims are serving jail sentences and that
the numbers are still growing. Across England and Wales the proportion has
risen from 8% one decade ago to 14% now. In London, the figure is 27%, which is
more than double the 12% of the capital's population who are Muslim.
On
March 27, ITV News reported that the problem of honor-based violence and forced marriages in
England is "worse than people think," but that many people are afraid
of speaking out because they do not want to be branded as being
"racist." Claire Phillipson from Wearside Women in Need said:
"I
have no doubt that all over the North East [England] first, second, third
generation English young women are being forced into marriage.
"Schools
and communities are keeping silent about it, because they are concerned that
they would be called racist, Islamophobic. They don't quite know where the line
between culture, religion and human rights should be drawn."
![]() |
An image from the video "Right to choose:
Spotting the signs of forced marriage - Nayana", produced by the UK
Foreign & Commonwealth Office.
|
On
March 13, the Law Society, the main professional association representing and
governing the legal profession in England and Wales, issued ground-breaking guidance to help lawyers draft Sharia-compliant
wills and estate planning documents. The move effectively enshrined Islamic
Sharia law in the British legal system for the first time.
In April,
the British government launched a public consultation on whether or not to introduce student loans
that are compliant with Islamic Sharia law, which forbids loans that involve
the payment of interest.
Critics
said that the dispute over interest-bearing student loans follows stepped-up
demands for Sharia-compliant banking and insurance as well as credit cards,
mortgages and pension funds, which—taken together—are contributing to the
establishment of parallel Islamic financial and legal systems in Britain.
Separately,
Lloyds Bank was accused of reverse religious discrimination after dropping overdraft fees
for Muslims but not for others. The bank said that non-Muslims would have to
pay up to £80 (€97, $135) a month for an overdraft, but that for Muslims
"there won't be any charges."
Meanwhile,
the fast food giant Subway removed ham and bacon from almost 200 outlets in
Britain and switched to halal (Arabic for "permitted" or
"lawful") meat alternatives, apparently in an attempt to please its
Muslim customers.
On
April 9, Home Secretary Theresa May published her annual report on the government's strategy for countering
terrorism. The report concluded that battle-hardened British jihadists
returning from the war in Syria now pose the most serious threat to British
security.
On
April 17, the Sheffield Crown Court found Aras Hussein, 21, guilty of beheading his girlfriend, Reema
Ramzan, 18, with a kitchen knife in her apartment in Sheffield in June 2013. He
was sentenced to life, with a minimum of 20 years in prison.
On
April 30, a jury at the Manchester Crown Court heard how
Ahmed Al-Khatib, 35, murdered his wife for becoming "too
westernized." The prosecution told the jury that the mother of three had
been "in fear of her husband" and "believed he might one day
kill her." She eventually sought help from the police and a lawyer. The
prosecutor said:
"The
family of the defendants were insulted that she had gone to the law. They
wanted her and her children back within the family fold... Therefore, it was
decided that she should either be forced to comply or be killed."
On
April 19, the Charity Commission, a government agency that regulates charities
in the UK, announced a crackdown on Muslim charities that send money to jihadist groups
in Syria.
On
April 24, British counter-terrorism officials launched a nationwide campaign
aimed at encouraging Muslim women to contact the police if they were concerned
that their family members or close friends might be preparing to travel to
Syria to fight.
Also
on April 24, a group of British lawyers launched a new organization called "Sharia Watch UK" to
"highlight and expose those movements in Britain which advocate and
support the advancement of Islamic law in British society." The group
called Sharia law "Britain's Blind Spot."
In May,
a senior adviser to Lutfur Rahman, the extremist-linked mayor of the heavily
Islamized London Borough of Tower Hamlets, threatened Muslim riots unless people stop questioning the manner of his
re-election. Rahman narrowly won re-election on May 23 as an independent, but
the result was cast into doubt amid dozens of reports of voter intimidation and
a chaotic count that took more than five days to declare a final result. Rahman
was expelled from the Labour Party in 2010 after The Telegraph revealed
his close links to an Islamic extremist group, the Islamic Forum of Europe.
On
May 19, a jury in New York found Abu Hamza, the former imam of Finsbury Park mosque in north
London, guilty on all 11 counts following a four-week trial. The one-eyed,
handless Hamza was charged with organizing a terrorist camp in the US, taking
hostages in Yemen and sending one of his followers from London to train with
al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. The guilty verdicts followed a lengthy battle over his
extradition from the UK, which began in 2004 but was only carried out in 2012.
At the same time, Scotland Yard and MI5 were accused of ignoring warnings that Hamza was establishing an international
hub of terrorism in London as far back as 1999. Despite Abu Hamza's conviction,
Britain remains the world's leading recruiting ground for al-Qaeda.
On
May 16, the Telegraph reported that Aminu Sadiq Ogwuche, a British-born "ringleader" of
the Islamist group Boko Haram, responsible for kidnapping hundreds of
schoolgirls in Nigeria, was radicalized while studying at a British university.
Ogwuche, the son of a retired Nigerian colonel, was said by fellow students at
the University of Glamorgan in Wales to call himself "The Lion of
Allah" and threatened to cut off the hands and feet of non-Muslims while
living in the UK.
On
May 9, the mother of Nicky Reilly—a convert to Islam who tried to blow up a
restaurant packed with diners in Exeter in 2008—told the BBC's Radio 4 that the would-be suicide bomber was turned into
"a loaded gun" by Islamic extremists in Britain. The 22-year-old
changed his name to Mohammad Abdulaziz Rashid Saeed-Alim in 2004 in tribute to
the jihadists who attacked New York on September 11, 2001. Kim Reilly said:
"They were telling him he would be in paradise with 44 virgins, and he
believed it."
On
May 7, Pizza Express, a British restaurant chain, revealed that halal meat was being used in all of its chicken dishes in all
of its 434 restaurants across the UK. Under Islamic law, chicken can only be
eaten if the bird's throat has been slit while it is still alive. A Koranic
verse is also recited during the ritual. On May 15, it emerged that at least a dozen top universities, including Oxford
University, have been secretly serving halal meat to unsuspecting students.
On
May 30, a Somalian doctor with a practice in Birmingham was struck off the medical register after he was found by a medical
malpractice tribunal to have told an undercover reporter how to arrange female
genital mutilation abroad for her two nieces.
In June,
Tablighi Jamaat, a radical Islamic group committed to "perpetual
jihad" to spread Islam around the world, edged one step closer to building one of the world's largest mosques in
London after a star Muslim opponent of the controversial project was
intimidated into silence. The proposed mega-mosque would be built on a 16-acre
site near the Olympic Stadium, and would have a capacity for more than 9,000
worshippers.
On
June 17, British Prime Minister David Cameron warned that British citizens and other Europeans fighting alongside
Islamist insurgents in Iraq and Syria posed the biggest threat to Britain's
national security.
But
on June 22, the Financial Times reported: "The Foreign and Commonwealth Office has halved its
counter-terrorism budget even as officials warn of the most severe threat to
the UK from overseas terror groups since the London bombings in 2005."
Also
on June 22, the Sunday Times reported that British jihadists are faking their deaths on the battlefield
in Syria in an attempt to return to the UK undetected. In one instance, the
martyrdom of a fighter in Syria was announced by his colleagues on social
media, only for police to arrest the "dead" individual at the port
town of Dover.
The Times also
reported that a British jihadist using the nom de guerre Abu Rashash Britani
recently posted a message on Twitter that said: "When we establish
khilafah [an Islamic state], a battalion of mujahideen shud head to UK &
capture David Cameron & Theresa May n behead them both :)"
Another
jihadist from Birmingham named Junaid Hussain tweeted that the "black flag
of jihad" will soon fly over Downing Street. He also tweeted:
"Imagine if someone were to detonate a bomb at voting stations or ambushed
the vans that carry the casted votes. It would mess the whole system up."
Hussain re-tweeted a warning from a like-minded countryman for British people
to "watch out," because "we'll come back to the UK and wreak
havoc."
Meanwhile,
a 19-year-old jihadist from Portsmouth named Muhammad Hassan promised a "killing spree" of British citizens if he were ever to
return to Britain.
On
June 16, a new law entered into effect, which makes forced marriage a self-standing criminal
offense in England and Wales and is punishable by up to seven years in prison.
Research commissioned by the government estimates that up to 8,000 young women
in Britain are the victims of forced marriages each year, but charities say the
actual number is far higher because many victims are afraid to come forward.
On
June 12, the BBC reported that
some Muslim families in Britain have begun hiring bounty hunters to track down
the victims of forced marriage who try to run away.
On
June 25, Britain became the first Western nation to issue Islamic bonds, completing a plan that was more than seven years in
the making. Investors placed £2.3 billion ($3.9 billion) of orders, more than
11 times the amount of bonds on offer.
On
June 24, the Minister of State for Universities and Science, David
Willetts, said that a Sharia-compliant alternative to the conventional student
loan could become available in the UK beginning in 2016. He said: "It
would be a tragedy if any student, particularly a Muslim student because of
concerns about so-called interest rates, were put off from going to
university." He added: "This does not mean we are introducing Sharia
law in the UK."
On
June 6, the British Ministry of Defense (MoD) admitted that non-Muslim soldiers are unknowingly being fed halal meat on
military bases.
Also
in June, an investigation found that all of the chicken and lamb meat being served at the
University of Warwick is halal. A first-year student commented:
"It's
disgusting that only Islamic meat is provided and no others. How is it
acceptable for me to eat blessed meat of another religion that is different to
my own? To effectively impose a monopoly on my choice leads me to question
whether their religion (Islam) is prioritized over my own."
On
June 9, government inspectors found that the library at Olive Tree Primary School, a Muslim school in
Luton, included books that advocate stoning and lashing. Leaders of the school
accused the inspectors of "Islamophobia."
In July,
analysts at SITE, a group that monitors radical Islamic propaganda, reported that a growing number of British women have moved to Syria to
raise children under the Islamic State. One such woman is Aqsa Mahmood, a
20-year-old woman from Glasgow, Scotland who left for Syria in November 2013.
Mahmood
attended private schools and had wanted to become a doctor, but she dropped out
of university without warning and vanished overnight in order to become a
jihadist and marry an IS fighter. Using the jihadist name of Umm Layth (Arabic
for "Mother of the Lion") Mahmood uses social media to encourage
other British Muslim women to leave their families behind and join the jihad in
Syria. She wrote: "Once you arrive in the land of jihad, the Islamic State
is your family."
On
July 3, the Inner London Crown Court sentenced six Muslims to a combined 36 years in prison for attacking two
black men with a baseball bat because they were not Muslim. Judge Ian Darling
said: "Not only was there a religious aspect to this offense, but there
was an undoubted racial element."
"If
and when I come back to Britain it will be when this Khilafah, the Islamic
state, comes to conquer Britain, and I come to raise the black flag of Islam
over Downing Street, over Buckingham Palace, over Tower Bridge and over Big
Ben."
On
July 6, a British jihadist using the alias Abu Dugma al-Britani, warned that the Islamic State would capture Downing Street and hold
executions in Trafalgar Square. Using Twitter, he wrote: "Downing Street
will be a base for Muslims. Trafalgar Square is where public executions will
take place. Army of Islamic State is coming."
On
July 8, Lord Richard Scott, a former British Supreme Court judge, called on Christians to marry Muslims to tackle Islamophobia. He said:
"Of
my two sons one has become a Muslim and of my two daughters one of those has
become a Muslim, and I have 12 lovely grandchildren, seven of whom are little
Muslims.
"The
family relationships since those events took place have been as happily familial,
as close and as good as any parent or grandparent could wish.
"I
do just wonder that if an improvement is needed between the faith groups, one
way of promoting that might be to encourage interfaith marriages."
On
July 14, a Muslim checkout worker at a Tesco supermarket in London refused to sell non-Muslim customer ham and wine because it was Ramadan.
The checkout clerk told Julie Cottle that he would not touch the items because
they are considered forbidden by Islam and advised her to use the self-service
tills instead. When Cottle complained to the manager, he backed the worker's
right to refuse to serve her because it was the holy month of Ramadan and he
was fasting. Tesco later apologized for the incident and said the worker had
been "spoken to."
On
July 18, a government report leaked to the Guardian revealed that a group of Islamic fundamentalists, mostly men of Pakistani
origin, infiltrated the management of at least ten schools in Birmingham,
sometimes breaking the law in order to introduce Muslim worship and sex
segregation. Their activities were unimpeded by council officials who were
fearful of allegations of Islamophobia and who forced ousted teachers to sign
gagging clauses rather than treating their complaints seriously as whistleblowers.
On
July 28, the Star City entertainment complex in Birmingham barred non-Muslims from entering a cinema because they were not
celebrating the Islamic festival Eid. One non-Muslim complained on Facebook:
"My
friends family have just been refused entry at VUE cinema as they are not
Muslim this is a shocking disgrace. If the shoe was on the other foot there
would be uproar. Can you imagine banning all Muslims to star city because it's
Christmas."
In August,
data released by the Office of National Statistics [ONS] showed that Mohammed was the most popular given to boys born in Britain
in 2013. Although the ONS claimed that Oliver was the top name with 6,949 boys,
it was in fact Mohammed when the top three spellings for the name (Muhammad,
3,499; Mohammed, 2,887 and Mohammad, 1,059) are combined to yield 7,445 boys.
On
August 21, it emerged that there are now more British Muslims fighting for the Islamic
State than for Britain's military.
On
August 23, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey, warned that radical Islam is on the rise and "imperiling our way of
life, threatening to undermine the values that have been bitterly won over the
centuries." He called on Britons to "recover a confidence in our own
nation's values. For too long we have been self-conscious and even ashamed
about British identity." He added:
"By
embracing multiculturalism and the idea that every culture and belief is of
equal value we have betrayed our own traditions of welcoming strangers to our
shore.
"The
fact is that for too long the doctrine of multiculturalism has led to
immigrants establishing completely separate communities in our cities. This has
led to honor killings, female genital circumcision and the establishment of
sharia law in inner-city pockets throughout the UK."
On
August 26, Alexis Jay, the leader of an independent inquiry in the sexual abuse
of children in Rotherham, released a horrifying report that found that gangs of mainly Muslim men of
Pakistani heritage had groomed, terrorized and abused at least 1,400 girls,
some as young as 11, in Rotherham over a 16-year period between 1997 and 2013.
On
August 31, the Independent on Sunday reported that a House of Commons committee would launch an investigation
into whether Tony Blair's Labour government knew about the Rotherham child
abuse scandal as far back as 2001, but refused to act because of his
government's desire to pacify Muslim communities.
On
August 30, a straw poll conducted by the BBC's Saturday Morning Live Show found that 95% of
respondents said that they think multiculturalism in Britain is a failure.
In September,
new census data showed that the number of Muslim children in Birmingham was greater than
the number who are Christian for the first time. Of Birmingham's 278,623
children, 97,099 were registered as Muslim and 93,828 as Christian. There were
also 54,343 children who were recorded as following no religion, showing the
rising trend of atheism in the country.
On
September 12, London Deputy Mayor Stephen Greenhalgh warned that London children under the age of ten are being "trained
to be junior jihadis," a disturbing sign of the growing extremist threat
in the capital. He said:
"It's
pretty horrendous when you hear how some of these children are being
radicalized. The threat of radicalization of young people is real and this is a
problem that is going to be with us not just for a couple of years, but for the
next generation."
On
September 5, it emerged that networks of Islamic radicals are recruiting British jihadists
through mosques and prayer centers. Previously, most British jihadists were
recruited via online networks. But a combination of a Turkish border clampdown
and a focus by counter-terrorist police on taking down online networks has made
recruitment on the ground more important.
On
September 3, eight Muslim men were charged with sexually abusing girls under the age of 16. The charges
followed series of police raids involving 120 officers in the Thames Valley. On
September 9, five Muslim men went on trial in Sheffield, accused of trafficking a 13-year-old girl
for sex.
On
September 10, the government announced that Muslim students will be offered Sharia-compliant interest
free student loans in an effort to get more Islamic pupils to go to university.
In
September, a customer at a Leicester branch of KFC was refused a hand-wipe as it might offend Muslims. Graham Noakes, 41, said
staff at the fast food chain's outlet in St George's retail park refused to
give him a hand-wipe because it was against its halal policy. Staff said this
was because the wipes are soaked in an alcohol-infused liquid and alcohol is
forbidden in the Koran.
In October,
a 75-year-old retiree was arrested for "racism" after saying "I'm not Muslim"
when he was asked to remove his shoes at security at Stansted Airport. Paul
Griffith was charged with causing "racially or religiously aggravated
harassment, alarm or distress."
In
October, a taxi company in Rochdale, a town tainted by a child sex-grooming
scandal perpetrated by Muslim gangs, began offering customers "white" or "local" drivers on
demand. The move came after two local drivers of Pakistani origin were jailed
for their part in the rape and trafficking of young white girls.
On
October 23, the BBC reported that
a memorial for Lee Rigby, a British soldier who was murdered by two Muslim
converts in May 2013, will not bear his name. Greenwich Council said a stone
would be placed in St George's Chapel garden, opposite Woolwich Barracks where
Rigby was based, but that the memorial would pay tribute to all fallen
servicemen and woman. Local MP Nick Raynsford said that a Rigby memorial would
attract "undesirable interest from [Islamic] extremists."
On
October 16, a new report showed that in just six months, nearly 2,000 women and girls in England
were treated by the National Health Service after undergoing female genital
mutilation [FGM]. In September alone, 467 female patients in England were newly
identified as having been subjected to FGM. The data published by the Health
and Social Care Information Centre [HSCIC] were the first official figures to
have been published on the numbers of FGM cases seen in hospitals in England.
On
October 30, a new study found that child sexual exploitation has become "the social
norm" in many parts of Greater Manchester. The report—Real Voices, Child
Sexual Exploitation In Greater Manchester—estimated that nearly 650 children
reported missing in towns across Greater Manchester in 2014 were at risk of
child sexual exploitation or serious harm. But despite almost 13,000 reports of
child sex abuse in the past six years, only about 1,000 people have been
convicted. The report's author—Labour MP Ann Coffey—was criticized for failing
to address the fact that many street grooming gangs are made up of Muslim men.
She said it would be "wrong" to focus on "Asian" gangs
targeting teenage girls.
On
October 30, a Populus survey found that one in seven young British adults has "warm
feelings" towards Islamic State. A tenth of Londoners and one in 12 Scots
view Islamic State favorably, but sympathy for the militant group reaches its
highest levels among the under-25s.
In November,
British police foiled an Islamist plot to behead Queen Elizabeth at a Remembrance Day
event at the Cenotaph, a war memorial situated on Whitehall in London.
In
London Borough of Croydon, a couple from Afghanistan threatened to kill their daughter if she rejected a forced marriage and to
behead her if she contacted authorities for help.
On
November 5, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, told an international terrorism conference that his officers are
"struggling to cope" with the speed of immigration and because many
of those coming to Britain speak different languages and hold different views of
authority.
On
November 16, senior officials at Scotland Yard advised British police officers not to wear their uniforms on the way to
and from work amid concerns that Islamic extremists are plotting to target them
on the streets.
On
November 10, The Times reported that British intelligence officials warned senior ministers that
the scale of terrorist activity is so great that an attack is "almost
inevitable" in the coming months.
On
November 26, the British government unveiled sweeping new counter-terrorism measures which—if approved by
Parliament—would give the United Kingdom some of the "toughest powers in
the world" to fight Islamic terrorism.
On
November 12, the BBC reported that
the British Islamist Abu Rumaysah skipped bail after being arrested on
terrorism charges and is thought to be in Syria, despite being banned from
leaving the UK. Rumaysah left London on a bus bound for Paris after blundering
police failed to confiscate his passport. On November 2, 60 Minutes aired an interview with Rumaysah, who said:
"Ultimately,
I want to see every single woman in this country [Britain] covered from head to
toe. I want to see the hand of the thief cut. I want to see the adulterer
stoned to death. I want to see Sharia law in Europe. And I want to see it in
America, as well. I believe our [Sharia] patrols are a means to an end."
On
November 1, a new report by Sharia Watch UK exposed the activities of Islamist
speakers on British university campuses. The report—Learning Jihad—documented how Islamists are making anti-Semitic remarks, deriding
Western notions of human rights, advocating female genital mutilation and
calling for a raft of strict Sharia punishments such as stoning adulterers to
death.
On
November 11, the new Muslim owner of the exclusive Bermondsey Square Hotel in London
abruptly banned alcohol and pork from the bar and grill at the hotel, in order to
run it "in accordance with Sharia law." The £220 ($340)-a-night hotel
is believed to be one of the first in the UK to introduce the strict Muslim
policy, but staff said the changes have caused business to plummet, with many
reservations cancelled.
Also
on November 11, it was reported that thousands of Muslim school children in East Lancashire were
being offered a pork-based vaccine as part of a major new flu immunization
program. The new nasal spray, which is made with gelatin derived from pigs, is
part of a pilot project, but Muslim leaders complained that the decision not to
offer an alternative was "outrageous" because they consider the spray
to be 'haram' or sinful. Public Health England, which is leading the project,
said in a statement: "There is no suitable alternative to [the
porcine-based] Fluenz [vaccine]."
On
November 13, police in Manchester arrested 13
members of human trafficking gang after a pregnant woman was duped into
travelling to England before being sold into a sham Sharia law marriage. The
20-year-old Slovakian woman, who was 25 weeks pregnant, was tricked into flying
to Luton airport in May believing that she would be able to meet her sister.
After meeting a man at the airport who claimed to be her sister's friend,
however, she was taken to an address in Oldham. She then discovered that she
had been sold to a Muslim man who had paid the gang £15,000 (€19,000; $23,000)
to provide her a sham marriage. Police say the purpose of the marriage, which
took place under a Sharia ceremony in Rochdale in July, was to improve the
man's chances of avoiding deportation from the UK.
On
November 10, the BBC reported that police in Rotherham not only ignored, but actively obstructed
investigations into child abuse victims, apparently because the perpetrators
were Muslim. On November 19, the Birmingham Mail reported that the Birmingham City Council "buried" a politically
incorrect government-funded report that revealed to sexual exploitation of
young white girls by Muslim men. The author of the report, Jill Jesson, told
the newspaper that the report was never published and all copies were to be
destroyed. She said:
"I
was employed to do the work because I think they thought I would be
objective," she said. "I was told to reveal what I saw. I did – and
some people didn't like it.
"Every
time a news item has come on about sexual grooming of young girls and girls in
care, and the link, too, between private hire drivers, I have thought, 'I told
them about that in 1991 but they didn't want to acknowledge it.' I think the
problem has got worse and worse over time."
On
November 24, the Law Society withdrew controversial guidelines for lawyers on how to draft "Sharia
compliant" wills amid complaints that they encouraged discrimination
against women and non-Muslims. The guidelines advised lawyers on how to write
Islamic wills in a way that would be recognized by courts in England and Wales.
They set out principles that meant women could be denied an equal share of
inheritances while unbelievers could be excluded altogether.
In December,
a radio presenter for the BBC Radio 4's Feedback program, Roger Bolton, wrotean article for the Radio Times, a weekly magazine, in which
he warned that British school teachers are afraid to teach their students about
Christianity out of fear of offending Muslims. Bolton said that this was
creating a generation of British youth who are ignorant about Christian culture
and its role in British history. He cited a study that found that a quarter of
British children indicated that they have never read, seen or heard of Noah's
Ark,' that a similar proportion had never heard of the Nativity, that 43% had
never heard of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ, and that 53% had never read,
seen or heard of Joseph and his coat of many colors.
On
December 10, a new report by a human rights group exposed the vulnerability of Muslim women living in Islamic "marriages"
in the UK. The report—Equal and Free? 50 Muslim Women's
Experiences of Marriage in Britain Today—found
that the widespread practice of polygamy has left Muslim women without legal
rights upon "divorce," entirely dependent on their
"husbands" for financial support, and often unable to leave sham
"marriages" for fear of social ostracism or bringing
"shame" to their family.
On
December 11, the House of Lords held debates on female genital mutilation [FGM]
and the "impact of Sharia Law on the United Kingdom." Lord Faulks,
Minister of State for Civil Justice and Legal Policy, cited research that "revealed that approximately 60,000 girls are
at risk of FGM in the UK." In the following debate, Baroness Cox said: "The establishment of Sharia courts or councils in this country
has promoted the application of gender-discriminatory provisions in ways which
are currently causing considerable distress for many women." She also
asked why "polygamy is allowed to flourish" in Britain even though
bigamy is illegal.
Finally,
December saw the launch of the faceless "Deeni Doll," (deeni is Arabic for
"faith") which is adorned with a traditional hijab headdress, but has
no nose, mouth, or eyes, in order to comply with Islamic rulings regarding the
depictions of facial features. The toy, which retails for £25 ($40), was
designed by a former teacher at a Muslim school in Lancashire. She said:
"I
came up with the idea from scratch after speaking to some parents who were a
little concerned about dolls with facial features. Some parents won't leave the
doll with their children at night because you are not allowed to have any eyes
in the room. There is an Islamic ruling which forbids the depiction of facial
features of any kind and that includes pictures, sculptures and, in this case,
dolls."
Soeren Kern,
Gatestone Institute, December 30, 2014
Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
He is also Senior Fellow for European Politics at the Madrid-based Grupo de
Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies Group. Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter.
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