In this climate of anti-Muslim rage, counter-terrorist police
are talking more sense than the government or media.
A week after the Archbishop of Canterbury dared to float the idea
that some role for Islamic arbitration could be recognised in British law, the
anti-Muslim backlash grinds on. Never mind that Rowan Williams's proposal was
hedged with qualifications, that elements of sharia already have legal status,
that he used the existing practice of orthodox Jewish courts as a model, and
insisted such an accommodation could not override equal legal rights for all,
notably women. The media and political reaction has been hysterical and ugly:
from the Sun's declaration that Williams had "handed al-Qaida a
victory", to the Express claim that he had "surrendered to
fanatics", to the endless replays of floggings in western-backed states
like Saudi Arabia.
It was still going strong yesterday, as Daily Mail columnist Melanie
Phillips insisted the archbishop had weakened Britain against the "Islamist
enemy" and the Telegraph reported the Queen was "distressed". As
well she might be. What has been demonstrated in the past week, as Williams
should have realised, is that serious debate about equal rights for Muslims or
integration as a two-way process is becoming impossible in an atmosphere of
growing Islamophobic intolerance. Hardly had the Williams furore kicked off
than the minister Phil Woolas had triggered headlines about a "Muslim
inbreeding row" with remarks about the health risks of cousin marriages
among Pakistanis - a practice traditionally favoured by British monarchs.
It's hardly surprising that in a climate in which denouncing
"Islamists" has become the polite way to attack Muslims, and a
literary figure such as Martin Amis can rant about the threat to Europe from the Muslim birthrate and still be treated
with respect, public opinion has become inflamed. When politicians and
newspapers denounce "preachers of hate", it increasingly sounds as
though they're talking about themselves. Muslims, meanwhile, inevitably feel
beleaguered and, far from spurring integration, the relentless attacks -
fuelled by the need to justify war in the Muslim world - heighten alienation.
They also undermine efforts to prevent further atrocities in Britain. Last
week, as the archbishop's sharia storm raged, Gordon Brown banned the leading Islamic
cleric Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi from the country. The pretext given was his
support for Palestinian suicide attacks during the intifada. But the
81-year-old scholar has been to Britain
several times since then - in fact he was encouraged to come by the government
after the Iraq
invasion because of his opposition to al-Qaida. The real reason for the ban,
apart from the competition to appear tough on terror, is his links with the
Muslim Brotherhood, the most influential Islamist organisation in the Arab
world - but also a particular target for liberal hawks and neoconservatives.
They have played a key role in convincing the government to end its engagement
with mainstream Islamist groups and sponsor more pliant Muslim bodies.
One man who thinks that's not just bad for community relations but actually
a threat to Britain's security, is Detective Inspector Bob Lambert, who retired
six weeks ago as head of the Metropolitan police special branch's Muslim
Contact Unit. With more than a quarter century at the sharp end of
counter-terrorism operations, Lambert is scarcely a bleeding-heart liberal. But
he has been unable to speak out publicly until now and is deeply frustrated by
the Qaradawi ban. "Qaradawi is clearly useful in countering al-Qaida
propaganda", Lambert told me this week. "He is held in high esteem:
how can we think meaningfully about enlisting credible Muslim community support
against al-Qaida if we're not prepared to engage constructively with the likes
of Qaradawi?"
The aim of the Muslim Contact Unit, set up in 2002, was to avoid the
mistakes made during the IRA campaign of alienating the Irish community, and to
work with credible Muslim figures to isolate and counter those prepared to
support terror attacks. Lambert points as an example to the crucial role played
by prominent Islamist activists, such as the British Muslim Initiative leader
Azzam Tamimi, in taking back Finsbury Park mosque in 2005 from supporters of Abu Hamza, now
awaiting extradition to the US
on terrorism charges.
"The government approach is increasingly to lump all Islamist groups
together", the special branch veteran says. "But Islamists can be
powerful allies in the fight against al-Qaida influence. Our experience shows
they can be the levers that help get young people away from the most dangerous
positions. Issues that are most troubling to people like the oppression of
women and gays mustn't be swept under the carpet, but they also shouldn't be
treated as a block on engagement."
Lambert also highlights the importance of Islamic activists' cooperation
with the anti-war movement and radical MPs such as Jeremy Corbyn and George
Galloway in offering Muslim youth a way to channel their political grievances
into peaceful political action. This isn't about "political correctness or
deference to Islamist thinking," he insists, "it's a genuine issue of
London's
safety". Groups now promoted by the government, such as the Sufi Muslim
Council, may have their role, but from the perspective of countering terrorism
they have "neither religious nor political credibility. Let's be clear who
it is that can keep London
safe in the runup to the Olympic games".
Given such a challenge to official orthodoxy there has been opposition to
the Muslim Contact Unit's approach in both the police and government - and
reportedly pressure for it to be wound down or disbanded. Its work has been
singled out for attack by Dean Godson, research director of Policy Exchange,
the Tory-linked thinktank whose recent research on extremist literature in
British mosques was found to have been based on faked material. The unit has,
Godson argued, been suffering from "ideological Stockholm syndrome".
In fact, it clearly benefits from the common sense that comes from dealing
with the reality of terror on the ground, rather than a blinkered denial of its
link with western aggression in the Middle East
and beyond. The best way to reduce the threat of attack at home is for Britain to end
its disastrous interventions in the Muslim world - though to judge by the
foreign secretary David Miliband's new enthusiasm for liberal interventionism,
that's not going to happen soon. In the meantime, we need to listen to people
who know what they're talking about, like Bob Lambert.
Seumas Milne
The
Guardian,
Thursday February 14 2008
s.milne@guardian.co.uk
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