Naz Shah participated in the debate on Definition of
Islamophobia in the British
Parliament
Dr Mozammel Haque
Labour Member for Bradford West, Naz Shah, the co-sponsor of this debate
on Definition of Islamophobia in the British Parliament on 9th of
September 2021
Labour Member for Bradford West, Naz Shah, the co-sponsor of this
debate, said, “It is an absolute pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs
Murray. I echo the words of the hon. Member for Wycombe (Mr Baker). This debate
is much richer for the contribution made by my hon. Friend the Member for
Coventry South (Zarah Sultana). In our words, may Allah make it easy for you.”
In this connection, Naz Shah mentioned, In the main Chamber right now,
there is the debate on the legacy of Jo Cox. My hon. Friend mentioned what
happened in Batley and the divisive attitudes from different quarters,
particularly with regard to Islamophobia. I and I am sure many others wanted to
attend that debate—it is a shame that we cannot—but let us in Westminster Hall
not forget the words of Jo Cox, that we
“have far more in common than that which divides us.”—[Official Report, 3 June 2015; Vol. 596, c. 675.]
Naz Shah also mentioned, “We are here today because this Government have
failed British Muslims. Prior to 2018, the Government disregarded the need for
a definitive definition of Islamophobia altogether. Having come to their senses
in May 2019, the Government were happy to accept a definition—just not the one
that the Muslim community supported. Instead, the Government proposed to
appoint two independent advisers on Islamophobia to go in search of their own
definition, and 845 days later we have only one nominal Islamophobia adviser
and no definition. It is clear that this is not a matter of the Government not
trying; it is a matter of the Government not caring.”
She also mentioned, “In my adult life, I have never seen an issue in the
Muslim community receive such widespread formal support as this definition has.
In rejecting that definition, are the Government really telling me, this
Chamber and the House that their proposed definition will also garner the
support of Muslim communities? The Labour party has adopted the APPG definition
and we have also written to Labour councils to follow suit by adopting it on a
local level. The Liberal Democrats, the Scottish National party, the Greens and
even the Scottish Conservatives have adopted the definition, and yet this
Government feel that they can silence Muslim communities by rejecting the
definition that those communities support.”
Naz Shah continued, “The last time that there was a debate on this issue
in the main Chamber, the Government’s concerns about the APPG’s definition of
Islamophobia centred on the opinions expressed in a letter to Downing Street by
police chiefs, which was leaked, insinuating that it would hinder UK counter-terrorism
efforts. Yet on further investigation, both police chiefs—Martin Hewitt and
Neil Basu—concluded that the definition does not in any way affect
counter-terrorism efforts. It was this ludicrous claim about the definition
that the former Member for Beaconsfield and former Attorney General, Dominic
Grieve, described as “total and unadulterated rubbish”.”
She mentioned, “Additionally, it has been repeatedly noted by the APPG
and experts that the working definition of Islamophobia being proposed is a
non-legally binding definition and therefore presents no challenge to statute,
which takes legal precedent, and therefore it does not impede on free
speech, as the Government claim. The APPG definition of Islamophobia is a
working definition, similar to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance
definition of antisemitism.”
Naz Shah continued, “In fact, the APPG definition of Islamophobia is
built on the IHRA framework; every single example used by the APPG definition
comes from the IHRA definition of antisemitism. If one definition does not impede
free speech, why do the Government think that another definition, which is
built on the very same framework, does so? If the APPG’s definition does
contravene the Equality Act 2010, as the Government have previously suggested,
why do they not publish the legal advice they have taken on holding such
positions?”
She said, “The fact is that the Government maintain their silence as
hate crimes targeted at Muslims exceed 50%. They turn a blind eye to the
qualified, educated Muslim women denied jobs. They benefit from the Muslim
contribution to the pandemic response—need I remind the Government that more
than 50% of doctors’ fatalities from covid have been Muslims?—yet ignore the
Islamophobia that 81% of medical professionals face. They allow social media to
perpetuate narratives of terrorism around Muslims, while failing to call out
the one in three articles that misrepresent and generalise Muslims. They delay
a definition that is both timely and imperative; a 2019 YouGov poll found that
45% of British people saw a “fundamental clash” between Islam and the values of
British society, while 73% of complaints in the Government’s own party relate
to Islamophobia.”
Naz Shah continued, “This is not a matter of a Government’s not trying,
but of a Government’s not caring. If the everyday Islamophobia faced by British
Muslims is not enough to shake this Government into action—if the daughter of
the Muslim Scottish Health Secretary being denied a nursery place because of a
Muslim-sounding name and a young Sikh boy wearing a turban being called
“Taliban” and racially attacked for being perceived as a Muslim are not
enough—then the terror attacks that have taken place against Muslim communities
should wake them up.”
Labour Membrer Naz Shah mentioned, “Mohammed Saleem, Mushin Ahmed and
Makram Ali are the three grandfathers who have already been murdered in
Islamophobic terror attacks across the UK. Across the world, we have witnessed
51 Muslims murdered by a far-right terrorist in Christchurch, New Zealand, and
only this June we witnessed a terror attack that led to three generations of a
single family being murdered in Ontario, Canada.”
Naz Shah mentioned, “It has been a decade since Baroness Warsi, the
former Conservative party chair, said that Islamophobia had
“passed the dinner table test”.
We have seen not only a year-on-year increase in Islamophobic sentiments
online, in the media and across society, but a terrifying rise in attacks on
Muslim communities.”
She said, “When I say that all the evidence points to the Government not
caring, I am not saying it merely as an Opposition Member, but because if, God
forbid, there is another deadly terror attack on Muslims in the UK, this
Government’s inaction, negligence and often silent condoning of Islamophobia
will be partly responsible. When they deny Muslim communities even a
simple definition of Islamophobia and halt the work of the Government’s
own anti-Muslim hatred working group, it is that serious.”
She also mentioned, “If the Minister disagrees, I am happy to let him
intervene to tell the House the last time the Government’s anti-Muslim hatred
working group actually met. Who are the two independent Islamophobia advisers?
Has one of the advisers the Government appointed even started his role, two
years on from his appointment? The answer is no—just as I thought.
Naz Shah said, “The reality is that Islamophobia is widespread. A report
by the Centre for Media Monitoring, analysing media output over a three-month
period in the fourth quarter of 2018, comprising analysis of more than 10,000
published articles and broadcast clips, found that 59% of all articles
associated Muslims with negative behaviour, and 37% of articles in
right-leaning and religious publications were categorised with the most
negative rating of “very biased”. More than a third of all articles
misrepresented or generalised about Muslims, and terrorism was the most common
theme.”
She said, “We know, and we witnessed through the height of the pandemic,
how untrue those sentiments are. When the nation needed communities to come
together, to serve, to unite and to protect our nation, British Muslims played
a leading role. Sadly, however, far-right extremist and Islamophobic
stereotypes peddle a narrative that can lead to worrying consequences for
Muslim communities.”
Naz Shah concluded her speech, “Adopting a definition is only the first
step. Preventing, tackling and challenging Islamophobia is a debate that must
still take place. Nobody—not I, nor the British Muslims here today or in my
constituency—is asking for special treatment from this Government. All we are
asking is simply that the Government accept the definition, so that we can help
people and better understand Islamophobia. We need to put out a political
statement that Islamophobia, in all its forms, is unacceptable and that attacks
on Muslims must stop. That is all we asking for—literally, it is just equality.
This is not about requesting a change of law, or Muslims asking for extra
protection. We are simply asking the Government to recognise Islamophobia,
accept a non-binding working definition and make a political statement to that
effect. That is why I end by asking the Government to end the discriminatory
behaviour towards Muslims. The Government should accept the definition, and let
us all work together to tackle racism, prejudice and hatred in all its forms.”
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