When the All-Party Parliamentary Group on British Muslims reported on the subject of prejudice against Muslims earlier this year, it also included a definition of Islamophobia: “Islamophobia is rooted in racism and is a type of racism that targets expressions of Muslimness or perceived Muslimness”. Islamophobia was a type of racism.
Our free and fearless press was most unhappy at the news, and it was therefore no surprise that then Prime Minister Theresa May and her pals declined to adopt the definition: after all, the press was sustaining her in power, and defining Islamophobia as racism would severely cramp the press’ style, or lack of it.
It was rejected on free speech grounds, the National Police Chiefs Council claiming “We are concerned that the definition is too broad as currently drafted, could cause confusion for officers enforcing it and could be used to challenge legitimate free speech on the historical or theological actions of Islamic states. There is also a risk it could also undermine counter-terrorism powers, which seek to tackle extremism or prevent terrorism”.
But now a problem has entered: senior Police officers have confirmed that they have no problem with the APPG definition. And i News has told readers “Boris Johnson is under pressure to accept the widely-recognised definition of Islamophobia after it emerged that two of the country’s top police officers have agreed it would not undermine counter-terrorism operations”. So who are the two top cops?
“A letter seen by i from Martin Hewitt, chairman of the National Police Chiefs Council, and Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu, Britain’s top anti-terrorism officer, says they have been reassured by a group of MPs and peers that the definition would not hinder their work in fighting extremism”. The Tories have thus far resisted adoption “amid claims it would hinder free speech and stop police investigating terrorists”.
Now the UK Government is out of excuses: “The definition has been adopted by all other political parties, including the Conservative Party in Scotland, a number of trade unions and the London mayor”. Zubaida Haque has asked “Just about everyone - incl police chiefs now agree that the definition of Islamophobia is anti-Muslim racism. The definition has widespread support across 3rd sector faith/race equality orgs and all the political parties - except [Conservatives]. Why not?” Sadly, the reason is the same as last May.
The Tories were dependent on the press to keep cheerleading for them. The Tories are still dependent on the press to keep cheerleading for them. And the press, which has run a succession of anti-Muslim stories in the recent past, mostly wants to be able to keep on running those stories, from the Sun right up to and including the Times.
So expect Bozo The Clown, supported by every editor in the right-leaning press, and scores of pundits and hangers-on, to fudge the issue, avoid adopting the definition, and most likely play for more time. So those papers and their websites can carry on smearing Muslims to their hearts’ content. Because they think it sells more copies.
Free speech is not free hate speech. And it’s high time the press took that on board.
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I wonder if corporate media will give this the same saturation "coverage" (aka blanket right wing propaganda) it gives to "Labour's continuing antisemitism problem"......
ReplyDeleteScratch that - I don't wonder at all. The gutless twats will ignore it. As usual.
Dear Zelo ,
ReplyDeleteIn the mid-Eighties my late wife and I visited the grave of Eve in Jeddah . It led me to a speculation about the basis of 4 versions of monotheism in a radius of 200 miles around Medina , that’s the pharoah Aken-Aten’s sun god , Judaism , Christianity and Islam . Given the elemental topography of the area and sitting down in the desert , it’s relatively easy not to be distracted and so to focus on ‘God’ . Fundamentally I suspect these religions were essentially for nomadics , and this might account for the tribal and clannish nature of them and so the fear of ‘the other’ , linked also with the ‘wandering’ myth which attaches to them .
Obviously with increasingly urbanisation these monotheisms split into cults and that is a feature of them . Various versions of Jewry , the Copts , Greek Orthrodox , Roman Catholic , and Protestants for Christianity and of course the Sufis , Shia and Sunnis of Islam . The original peoples were largely Semitic and in a largely enlightened , urban and secular society such as ours , identifying these monotheistic ‘faiths’ individually I think grants them too much influence . I suppose that in that respect my essential rejection of some aspects of these ‘faiths’ , in particular their ‘fear of the other’ makes me anti-Semitic , but I think different rule books for different categories , Jewish , Christian , Islam etc. gives them too much credence . Middle Eastern monotheistic faith based racist is surely enough ,
Derek
Guess what.
ReplyDeleteNot even a passing mention on TV broadcast "news".
How odd.