Michael Adebolajo
By
Melanie Phillips
Ever since the spectre of Islamic
terrorism in the West first manifested itself, Britain has had its head
stuck firmly in the sand.
After
both 9/11 and the 7/7 London transport bombings, the Labour government
promised to take measures to defend the country against further such
attacks.
It
defined the problem, however, merely as terrorism, failing to
understand that the real issue was the extremist ideas which led to such
violence.
Following the barbaric slaughter of Drummer
Rigby on the streets of Woolwich by two Islamic fanatics, the Prime
Minister has announced that he will head a new Tackling Extremism and
Radicalisation Task Force
Accordingly, it poured money into Muslim community groups, many of which turned out to be dangerously extreme.
When
David Cameron came to power, his Government raised hopes of a more
realistic approach when it pledged to counter extremist ideas rather
than just violence.
This approach, too, has failed. The Government still has no coherent strategy for countering Islamist radicalisation.
Following
last week’s barbaric slaughter of Drummer Rigby on the streets of
Woolwich by two Islamic fanatics, the Prime Minister has announced that
he will head a new Tackling Extremism and Radicalisation Task Force.
Clutching a bloodied meat cleaver, the man,
identified as Michael Adebolajo, says 'you people will never be safe',
and 'we swear by Almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you'
And the Home Secretary has said she will look at widening the banning of radical groups preaching hate.
But
at the heart of these promises remains a crucial gap. That is the need
to define just what kind of extremism we are up against.
The
Government has been extraordinarily reluctant to do this — because it
refuses to face the blindingly obvious fact that this extremism is
religious in nature.
Boris Johnson said of the Woolwich murder 'It is completely wrong to blame this killing on the religion of Islam'
It arises from an interpretation of
Islam which takes the words of the Koran literally as a command to kill
unbelievers in a jihad, or holy war, in order to impose strict Islamic
tenets on the rest of the world.
Of course, millions of Muslims in Britain and elsewhere totally reject this interpretation of their religion.
Most
British Muslims want to live peacefully and enjoy the benefits of
Western culture. They undoubtedly utterly deplore the notion that the
kind of carnage that occurred in Woolwich should take place in Britain.
Betrayal
And
let’s not forget that, worldwide, most victims of the jihad are
themselves Muslims whom the extremists judge to be polluted by Western
ideas.
Nevertheless,
this fundamentalist interpretation of the Koran is what is being spouted
by hate preachers in Britain and on the internet, and is steadily
radicalising thousands of young British Muslims.
Now
the Prime Minister says he will crack down on such extremism. Yet after
the Woolwich atrocity, he claimed it was ‘a betrayal of Islam’ and that
‘there is nothing in Islam that justifies this truly dreadful act’.
The
London Mayor Boris Johnson went even further, claiming: ‘It is
completely wrong to blame this killing on the religion of Islam’ and
that the cause was simply the killers’ ‘warped and deluded mindset’.
Yet
the video footage of the killers — who had shouted ‘Allahu Akhbar’ when
butchering Drummer Rigby — records one of them citing verses in the
Koran exhorting the faithful to fight and kill unbelievers, and
declaring: ‘We swear by Almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you.’
Frankly,
these comments by the Prime Minister and London Mayor were as absurd as
saying the medieval Inquisition, for example, had nothing to do with
the Catholic Church, but was just the product of a few warped and
deluded individuals.
Power
Their
comments were also deeply troubling. For if politicians refuse to
acknowledge the true nature of this extremism, they will never counter
it effectively.
But
then, government officials have always refused to admit that this is a
religious war. They simply don’t understand the power of religious
fanaticism.
Of course,
there are fanatics in all religions. Within both Judaism and
Christianity, there are deep divisions between ultras, liberals and
those in between.
Omar Bakri Mohammed praises alleged Woolwich
killed Michael Adebolajo and describes him as 'courageous' and a 'hero'.
The radical cleric says the murder is revenge for the 'Muslim brothers'
who have lost their lives in Afghanistan and Iraq
In medieval times, moreover,
Christianity used its interpretation of the Bible also to kill
‘unbelievers’, because early Christians believed they had a divine duty
to make the world conform to their religion at all costs. That stopped
when the Reformation ushered the Church into modernity, and today no
Christian wants to use violence to convert others to their faith.
The problem with the extremist teachings of Islam is that the religion has never had a similar ‘reformation’.
Certainly, there are enlightened Muslims in Britain who would dearly love their religion to be reformed.
But
they have the rug pulled from under their feet by the Government’s flat
denial of the religious nature of this terrible problem.
Some
people instead ascribe the actions of the Woolwich killers to factors
such as thuggish gang membership, drug abuse or family breakdown. But it
is precisely such lost souls who are vulnerable to Islamist fanatics
and who provide them with father figures, a sense of belonging and a
cause which gives apparent meaning to their lives.
Many
people find it incomprehensible that such fanatics remain free to
peddle their poison. Partly, this is because the Security Service likes
to gather intelligence through their actions. But it is also because of a
failure to understand what amounts to a continuum of extremism.
There
are too many British Muslims who, while abhorring violence at home,
nevertheless support the killing abroad of British or American forces or
Israelis, regard unbelievers as less than fully human, and homosexuals
or apostates as deserving the death penalty.
Such bigotry creates the poisonous sea in which dehumanisation and religious violence swim.
To the failure to understand all this must be added the widespread terror of being thought ‘Islamophobic’ or ‘racist’.
It
is quite astonishing that universities mostly refuse to crack down on
extremist speakers and radicalisation on campus — despite at least four
former presidents of Islamic student societies having faced terrorist
charges.
In
a devastating account published at the weekend, Professor Michael
Burleigh, who advised the Government on revising its
counter-radicalisation strategy, described how this process descended
into a ‘sad shambles’. He related how the Federation of Islamic Student
Societies (FOSIS) had created a sexually segregated environment in which
young people were being systematically indoctrinated in anti-Jew,
anti-homosexual and anti-Western hatred by Islamist speakers on campus.
But
although the Government condemned FOSIS for its failure to ‘fully
challenge terrorist and extremist ideology’, with the Home Secretary
even ordering that civil servants withdraw from its graduate recruitment
fair, the Faith and Communities Minister, Baroness Warsi, actually
endorsed it by attending one of its events at the House of Lords.
Lethal
Nor
has the Government done anything to stop extremist preachers targeting
and converting criminals in British jails at a deeply alarming rate.
On top of all this official incoherence is the paralysis caused by the excesses of the ‘human rights’ culture.
Thus
the Home Secretary is facing a monumental battle to get through
Parliament a Communications Bill that would give police and security
services access to records of individuals’ internet use.
Anjem Choudary at a demonstration in 2007, with alleged Woolwich killer Michael Adebojalo behind him
It is said that some of these extremist preachers exploit loopholes in the law. If so, then the law should be changed.
But
we all know what would befall any such attempt. It would be all but
drowned out by shrieks that we were ‘doing the terrorists’ job for them’
by ‘undermining our own hard-won liberties’.
Well, it’s time to face down such claims as vacuous and lethal nonsense.
The people threatening our liberties are Islamic radicals determined to destroy our way of life.
It is those who refuse to acknowledge the true nature of this threat who are doing the terrorists’ job for them.
And
unless Britain finally wakes up from its self-destructive torpor, all
who love civilised values — Muslim and non-Muslim alike — will be the
losers.
http://tinyurl.com/pp27hmu
1 comment:
Please take a look at my comments on the same topic over at The Diplomad (thediplomad.blogspot.com)
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