Showing posts with label Islamophobia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamophobia. Show all posts

Sunday, November 15, 2015

15-Nov-15: The real danger in post-massacre Paris?

Source articl is here
According to a New York Times headline, it's that "Parisians Fear Terror Attacks Will Divide, Not Unite, the City"

But in reality, the writer of the NYT article only got to the part about how 
Some people of immigrant background, who declined to give their names, worry that people will conflate France’s large Muslim population with radical Islam. 

at the very end of the 20-paragraph long, 876-word piece... in its second-to-last pararaph. 

Score one again for meme-hijacking-by-headline-editor.

And what does she write in the very last para?
Mr. Balet is not sure that solidarity was the reason so many stores and restaurants stayed shut today. “I think it is fear,” he said.

We agree. Fear is definitely a subject worth exploring. Also the aspect of how, whoever is behind Friday's mass killings, might well be more encouraged, rather than less, to execute this kind of horrible attack again even bigger and better in the future.


Tuesday, July 07, 2015

07-Jul-15: A decade after British Islamists murder dozens in London, not much room for optimism

Devastated London bus, July 7, ten years ago today [Image Source]
As the UK today marks the tenth anniversary of "the terrorist attacks that killed 52 people in London... the worst single terrorist atrocity on British soil", some of the more sober commentary has a pessimistic tone.

The key words in that last sentence come from a BBC report today. Given how the BBC has institutionalized a near-allergic avoidance of the word "terror" in its journalism, it's a welcome - though rare - resort to plain speaking.

The anniversary, to be marked by a minute's silence at 11:30 this morning, recalls a series of attacks on July 7, 2005 in which 52 people were murdered and 750 injured when human bomb attackers , all of them born, raised and educated in the UK, exploded three tube trains and a bus in London. The commemoration has provoked what The Guardian calls "soul searching about Britain’s progress in fighting terrorism".

Few cities can make the claim London can and does to being a cosmopolitan urban centre, tuned to the spirit of the times. What it says about itself and the experiences through which it has passed make it worth stopping to read and absorb.

To illustrate the direction the anniversary-driven introspection is taking, The Guardian's editors have chosen to publish an interview ["Ex-head of counter-terror: UK should lay on charter flights to Syria for jihadis"] with the man who was head of special operations for Scotland Yard in 2008-09, serving in that role as Britain’s "most senior counter-terrorism officer". The core message he conveys is stark:
Quick gave a bleak assessment about the danger Britain faced – a sense of pessimism shared by others who have served at a senior level in Britain’s counter-terrorism struggle. He said: “We’re in a worse place, in a more precarious place than ever. Ten years ago, we were dealing with relatively small numbers, who travelled mainly to Pakistan. They were engaged in conspiracies that were quite elaborate, involving plotting and communications that could be intercepted. “Now we are dealing with large numbers, who have travelled to Syria – we don’t know how many will come back with horrible intent – and the homegrown extremists who are here. We are in a less safe position than we were then, because the world outside our borders is less safe than 10 years ago. There are more people who are motivated, inspired or encouraged to mount these attacks. “Our understanding of radicalisation, what is at the heart of dissatisfaction with UK society, is very little understood.”
Other influential British voices are sounding a similar note:
Britain is at a greater threat from terror attack now than it was at the time of the 7/7 bombings a decade ago, according to an expert from a leading UK security think-tank. The national terror threat level was not public knowledge at the time of the attacks, when British youths killed 52 and injured more than 700 by detonating four bombs across London’s transport network. With the level now standing at “severe”, meaning an attack is “highly likely”, experts at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) said the threat had only grown in the past decade... Margaret Gilmore, a senior associate fellow specialising in national security at RUSI and a former BBC home affairs correspondent at the time of the attack, said that the rise of Isis and the ongoing threat of al-Qaeda made the dangers of a terror attack on home soil “more intense”. [Independent UK, today]
Underlining how much less safe life is for Londoners today, this report from three days ago:
Three men have been arrested on suspicion of plotting terror attacks in London on the 10th anniversary of the 7/7 bombings. Security forces arrested the men on Thursday after Isil and Taliban propaganda and maps of London were allegedly found on their computers. They were found with four laptops and computers in the raid near Peshawar in Pakistan... [Telegraph UK, July 4, 2015]
British targets have been sought and savagely attacked outside the UK as well, of course: "Tunisia terror attack: 30 of 38 people killed are British, UK says", CNN, July 2, 2015]

What can be done to make life better and safer? Former Chief Superintendent Quick has a concrete suggestion, quite different from current policy in every Western society as far as we can tell:
[T]hose wanting to go to Isis-controlled territory in the two countries should have to hand their British passports in as they leave. The condition of them being allowed to travel to join Isis could be they would never be allowed to return to Britain. He said: “You have to think how do you confront it, if you have hundreds or thousands who want to go there and live that life? We should try and convince them not to go. If they want to go, you have to ask the question, are we better off, if they surrender their passports and go? It’s better than them festering away here... Quick said an extremist Islamist pathology and British values were irreconcilable. [The Guardian, yesterday]
It's evident that jihad-based terrorism is going to be endlessly perplexing for Western societies. It helps to start with a large dose of openness to new views and humility about the things we seem to know and not know. Quick's admission above is just the sort of thing people need to hear: British understanding of what turns people like the 7/7 plotters into mass murderers is poorly understood.

The Economist, which does a good job of explaining complex issues, wrote this in an editorial after the terrorism of a decade ago:
More legislation may make Britons feel safer, but it will not tell them what they most want to know: who supplied the bombers with equipment and trained them to use it? And how many more British citizens are queuing up to martyr themselves beneath the streets of London? [Economist, July 14, 2005]
The honest answer is no one knows, a decade later. We will be scouring their website today to see if they revisit those questions.

A non-trivial voice in Britain's public discourse on lessons learned over the past decade comes from the UK's organized Moslem communities. One of the groups outspoken in propounding the case that it's actually Islamophobia - and not terror - that needs society's major attention, is Islamic Human Rights Commission ("set up in 1997... independent, not-for-profit, campaign, research and advocacy organization based in London"). For them, the recent Islamist massacres teach a specific kind of lesson:
Today's terrorist attacks in Kuwait, Tunisia and France provide further evidence, if any was still needed, that Muslims are the biggest victims of the extremism manifested in groups like Daesh (ISIS) and that is wrong to hold them collectively responsible for the actions of a morally depraved minority [IHRC press release, June 26, 2015]
Leaving aside its explicit hostility to Israel (which certainly illuminates what they mean and don't mean by "rights"), IHRC is outspokenly against anti-terrorism legislation; has been for at least the past decade. The Islamist massacres in London a decade ago appear to have provoked no condemnation or protest from its human rights-focused activists (at least, as far as we could tell from searching their site - and we would love to be corrected). An IHRC press release issued on July 22, 2015, a fortnight after the bombings, focuses on "the complete absence of sympathy and condemnation from both the media and the government... Such inaction indirectly legitimises the backlash attacks themselves." Sympathy not for Britain or the people murdered and maimed, but for the victims of post-7/7 British hostility to Moslems as Moslems. It will be interesting to see if they issue a press release on today's tenth anniversary.

Today is another appropriate moment to ask ["30-Jun-15: We need to be calling them what they are: human bombs"] that using the false and misleading term "suicide bomber" should end.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

20-Sep-06: Addressing Islamic Grievances - A Road Map

Many fair-minded, thinking individuals are vexed by the endless turmoil visited on the rest of us by Moslem mobs. This is as true today in Israel as it is in France, Australia, Indonesia, Thailand, the United States, Panama, Nigeria, South Africa and almost any other country you can think of.

What can be done, and what can we expect in the future?

Weighing in today on these issues is a political leader who happens to straddle both worlds; that of of Islam by reason of it being the state religion of the country he rules, and the west by reason of his being a strategic ally of the United States.

So far only Agence France Press seems to have picked up on the speech made by Pakistan's President General Pervaz Musharraf at yesterday's opening session of the UN General Assembly. It's carried in several of this morning's Australian newspapers and, as far as we can tell, nowhere else so far.

That's a pity because his words, while strident, are clear and definite. They give us some insight into what it's going to take to live in peaceable relations with Moslems. As he makes clear, some of them have a real agenda... for the rest of us.

Musharaff's main points.
  • We need to bridge, through dialogue and understanding, the growing divide between the Islamic and Western worlds. How? By a global ban on the defamation of Islam.
  • We must have an end to racial and religious discrimination against Muslims.
  • Because personalities of high standing are evidently oblivious of Muslim sensitivities, we must prohibit the defamation of Islam. (He clearly had Pope Benedict XVI in mind. But not only.)
  • We must eliminate terrorism comprehensively. How? A two-pronged strategy combining the conventional anti-terror fight with efforts to resolve conflicts afflicting the Islamic world.
  • "Across the Muslim world, old conflicts and new campaigns of military intervention have spawned a deep sense of desperation and injustice... Each new battleground involving an Islamic state has served as a new breeding ground for extremists and terrorists. Indiscriminate bombings, civilian casualties, torture, human rights abuses, racial slurs and discrimination only add to the challenge of defeating terrorism." (Somewhere in his analysis, there's evidently some cause and some effect. We somehow doubt that the rest of us would agree with him on which is which.)
  • "Unless we end foreign occupation and suppression of Muslim peoples, terrorism and extremism will continue to find recruits among alienated Muslims in various parts of the world."
We can't help feeling that Musharraf's road map would have benefitted immeasurably from just the teensiest, tiniest suggestion of Islamic introspection and responsibility. The barbaric acts of savagery carried out not only by Moslems but in the name of Islam, and to the general applause of Moslem rank-and-file and religious and secular leaders alike ought to have featured somewhere in this globally-prominent politician's outlook.

The silences and the missed opportunities speak far more eloquently in these difficult times than any road maps , non-negotiable demands or eloquent speeches emanating from the ranks of Moslem politicians, clergy and thinkers.