Sunday, 29 November 2020

Islamophobia Awareness Month Afzal Khan MP Wrote a Letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson

 Dr. Mozammel Haque

 

 

Afzal Khan MP for Greater Manchester Gorton wrote a letter to the U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnsonon thios occasion of Islamophobia Awareness Month.

 

November is the month of Islamophobia Awareness Month. On this month British Muslim community organised meetings, conferences and discussions. This year due to coronavirus, though talk and discussions were held but by zoom or Face Book Live Broadcasting meeting. Rt. Hon. Afzal Khan, M.P. for Manchester Gorton wrote a letter to the Prime Minister on 10th of November 2020. Following is the copy of the letter.

 


Afzal Khan MP’s Letter to

Prime Minister Boris Johnson

 

The Prime Minister

10 Downing Street

London

 

Dear Prime Minister

I write to you to raise the very serious and concerning issue of Islamophobia here in the U.K. , during this Islamophobia Awareness Month.

 

The recent report by Baroness Doreen Lawrence, “An Avoidable Crisis: The disproportionate impact of Covid-19 on black, Asian and minority ethnic communities,” details how Black, Asian and minority ethnic people have been subject to disgrace racism during the pandemic. Unfortunately, this has been reinforced by actions taken by your government and members of your Party.

 

The last-minute lockdown announcement ahead of Eid-ul-Adha left many of my constituents here in Manchester rightfully angry and frustrated. It also contributed to a deeply concerning and false, far-right narrative that British Muslims are ‘spreading corona,. As a result of this narrative, according to hate crime monitoring charity TellMAMA, Muslim communities have suffered a shocking 40% increase in online Islamophobia during the pandemic. The Government’s own figures also once again reveal Muslims have been victims to the highest proportions of all hate crimes committed this year.

 

As Prime Minister it is your duty to protect and safeguard all communities. However, I am disappointed, if not surprised, at the inaction of this Government in tackling the issue of Islamophobia is clearly growing. Fresh criticism has come from your own Islamophobia adviser, Qari Asim, for the way British Muslims have been treated during the pandemic.

 

You committed to launching an independent review of Islamophobia, but you have yet to deliver on this promise. The all-Party Parliamentary Group on British Muslims definition of Islamophobia has been adopted by all the major parties, including the Scottish Conservatives, apart from the Conservative Party.

 

In light of this, I urge you to take immediate action and fulfil your promise to conduct an independent investigation into Islamophobia within your Party and heed the recommendations set out in the Doreen Lawrence review to help better protect the 2.6 million British Muslims here in the U.K. I also urge you, as leader of the Conservative Party, to follow in the footsteps of  your colleagues in Scotland and adopt the APPG definition of Islamophobia.

 

Will you also meet with myself and key Muslim organisations to discuss how best to tackle Islamophobia going forward?

 

I look forward to your response.

 

Yours sincerely,

Afzal Khan, MP for Manchester Gorton.

 


Islamophobia in the British Parliament

Issues and concerns about Islamophobia were raised in both the Houses of the British Parliament. Afzal Khan, MP for Manchester Gorton, raised the issue of Islamophobia in the House of Commons on 5th of October, 2020. He asked the question on spike in Islamophobia in the House of Commons on Monday, the 5th of October, 2020.

 

Afzal Khan (Manchester, Gorton) (Lab)

Spike in Islamophobia

Afzal Khan, Labour Member of Parliament for Gorton, through Virtual participation said, “During this pandemic we have seen a sharp spike in Islamophobia, from blaming Muslims for the spread of covid-19 to fuelling online hate. I am sure the Secretary of State will want to join me in commending the community for its patience and hard work in these difficult months. Given that the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies has previously highlighted the good work of the Muslim Council of Britain in reaching minority groups that the Government are unable or unwilling to reach, can he outline what discussions he has had with the MCB and other Muslim organisations on the safe reopening of mosques?”

 

In reply, The Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, Robert Jenrick said, “Like the hon. Gentleman, I want to praise and thank the Muslim communities throughout the country for their forbearance. We have worked closely with them through our places of worship taskforce that the Prime Minister and I set up. I have had the privilege to meet representatives from mosques, including the London Central Mosque on the eve of the Eid celebrations, to thank them once again for their forbearance. We have put in place detailed guidelines to help mosques to reopen safely and will continue to work with Muslim groups in the weeks and months ahead.”

 

Places of Worship Open safely?

Labour MP for Gorton asked again, “What steps his Department has taken to help places of worship open safely during the covid-19 outbreak. 

 

The Secretary of State for Housing, Robert Jenrick said, “As Communities Secretary, ensuring places of worship can reopen and remain open has been a priority for me and my Department. Their contribution to our country as places of solace, as well as for significant moments such as weddings and funerals, is clear to us all. Places of worship remain open today for more than six people for communal prayer and services with existing covid-secure requirements continuing to apply.”

 

Earlier, Baroness Manzila Uddin spoke on Islamophobia in the House of Lords on 10 November 2020

 

Baroness Uddin (Non-Affl)

Baroness Manzila Uddin talked about Islamophobiua in the House of Lords on 10 November 2020. Baroness Uddin said, My Lords, I extend my sympathies to the family of Rabbi Sacks, the late Lord Sacks. It was a privilege to work with him on interfaith issues for many years, including in the early years of his journey. I also extend my thoughts and prayers to the families of all those who were so brutally murdered in Paris, Austria and Kabul. We stand together in their sorrow.

 

She also mentioned, “This House will agree that we must not fall prey to the language of hate and divisiveness being normalised in our discourse on terrorism and violent extremism, whoever the source. I am aghast at the hateful incitement and utterances from French leaders in denigrating faiths and communities, which will cause an insurmountable rise in Islamophobia, including Islamophobic attacks on Muslim communities in France and elsewhere.”

 

Baroness Uddin asked, “Will the Minister continue with her commitment to working across faith communities, including women-led organisations, to ensure that their security remains paramount? Does she agree that demonising religion in combating the plague of terrorism is likely to disfranchise societies and, in doing so, demean our best endeavours as a society committed to upholding respect for the values of freedom, liberty, justice and equality?”

 

Facebook Live Meeting

The Muslim Professionals Forum presented a Facebook Live Broadcasting Meeting on “Is Religion Welcome in British Public Life? A Talk by Guest Speaker Professor Tariq Modood, Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy, hosted by Khaled Noor, chair, The Muslim Professionals Forum on 10 October 2020. In the Questions & Answers section, while answering to a question on Islamophobia, Professor Tariq Modood, said. The Conservative Party    has some higher problem attracting Muslims and others to their ranks or to join them.

 

Tariq Modood is a Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy and the founding Director of the Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol. He is also the co-founder of the Journal Ethnicities. His latest book include Secularism and Multiculturalism (2019), Religion and Beliefs in British Public Life

 

Islamophobia

Professor Tariq Modood mentioned, “But it is interesting we have seen now on in the current government as well as in the Theresa May’s government and so on that quite a lot of ethnic immorality individuals, especially now I see people, Pakistani and Indian origin, holding quite high office in the Conservative Party and its Government and so on.

 

“But I think the bigger issue for the Conservative Party is that they are very slow and reluctant to tackle racism and specifically Islamophobia. There is a lot of Islamophobia in the Conservative Party. According to their own report, according to the materials we can find now, that is only be the tip on the iceberg, that only may be visible, most of the rest is invisible.

 

“The organisation, HOPE NOT HATE, just a few days ago published an extensive and a systematic report on Islamophobia in the Conservative Party – How the Conservative Party is failed over a long period of time; failed to deal with Islamophobia in its ranks; something that Baroness Sayeeda Warsi is a big champion of. She has spoken of so many times loudly about it and so on. But yet the movement has been very slow. So even something visual into the high office, nevertheless the tackling of certain kind of racism and Islamophobia; well, it is not tackled, it is not actually admitted be a large scale problem; they say so a few individuals but actually it is not. And this report by HOPE NOT HATE brings us out very well.

 

Professor Modood also said, “If we look at online communication which means people who are Conservatives, we see lots of derogatory remarks about Muslims, insulting remarks, the use of stereotypes and in some ways its come down to Prime Minister himself. We know that he made derogatory remarks about some Muslim women dress, conservative dress, modern dress and when asked to apologise he refused to do so.

 

He continued, “So obviously that sets the example, sets the tone so when we have the leadership election for the Conservative Party, one of the candidates – Sajid Javed – he said I am going to prioritise to investigate Islamophobia in the Conservative Party, then the other candidates also allying including Boris Johnson but he had not done so. He had been very slow to do. He has set up, I have to say, they have set up a body to investigate, not an independent body, as Baroness Warsi has been calling for and as the Muslim Council of Britain has been calling for, now the HOPE NOT HATE is calling for.

 

Talking about investigation Professor Modood mentioned, “They have not set up an independent enquiry but they have set up something within the Party structure and it will be instinctive when comes up. I cannot say, I feel with confidence, that they will get the full measure of the problem. They may continue to do what they have been doing which is to understate the problems as just been a problem to do with a number of individuals rather than a systematic cultural problem within the Conservative Party.”

 

Professor Tariq Modood is a Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy and the founding Director of the Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol. He is also the co-founder of the Journal Ethnicities. His latest book include Secularism and Multiculturalism (2019), Religion and Beliefs in British Public Life

 



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