Anti-terror code 'would alienate most Muslims'
• Draft strategy brands thousands as extremists 
• Ministers ponder plan to be unveiled next month

17 February 2009

The government is considering plans that would lead to thousands more British 
Muslims being branded as extremists, the Guardian has learned. The proposals 
are in a counterterrorism strategy which ministers and security officials are 
drawing up that is due to be unveiled next month.

Some say the plans would see views held by most Muslims in Britain being 
classed by the government as extreme.

According to a draft of the strategy, Contest 2 as it is known in Whitehall, 
people would be considered as extremists if:

  • They advocate a caliphate, a pan-Islamic state encompassing many countries.

  • They promote Sharia law.

  • They believe in jihad, or armed resistance, anywhere in the world. This 
would include armed resistance by Palestinians against the Israeli military. 

  • They argue that Islam bans homosexuality and that it is a sin against Allah.

  • They fail to condemn the killing of British soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan.

Contest 2 would widen the definition of extremists to those who hold views that 
clash with what the government defines as shared British values. Those who 
advocate the wider definition say hardline Islamist interpretation of the 
Qur'an leads to views that are the root cause of the terrorism threat Britain 
faces. But opponents say the strategy would brand the vast majority of British 
Muslims as extremists and alienate them even further.

The Guardian has also learned of a separate secret Whitehall counterterrorism 
report advocating widening the definition of who is considered extremist. Not 
all in Whitehall agree with the proposals and one official source said plans to 
widen the definition were "incendiary" and could alienate Muslims, whose 
support in the counterterrorism effort is needed. There were also fears it 
could aid the far right.

Contest 2 is still being finalised by officials and ministers. Those considered 
extreme would not be targeted by the criminal law, but would be sidelined and 
denied public funds. Ed Husain, of the Quilliam Foundation thinktank, said the 
root causes of terrorism were extremist views, even if those advocating the 
views did not call for violence.

Husain, once an extremist himself, said: "Violent extremism is produced by 
Islamist extremism and it's only right to get into the root causes."

Inayat Bunglawala, a former spokesman for the Muslim Council of Great Britain, 
said such plans would affect many British Muslims. Bunglawala, who now runs 
Engage, which tries to get Muslims to participate in politics and civic 
society, said: "That would alienate the majority of the British Muslim public. 
It would be counterproductive and class most Muslims as extremists."

In a speech in December, the home secretary, Jacqui Smith, said the 
government's counterterrorism strategy had to include challenging nonviolent 
extremist groups that "skirt the fringes of the law ... to promote hate-filled 
ideologies".

The Contest strategy was put in place in 2003 as the UK beefed up its response 
to the threat of al-Qaida inspired terrorism.

But the security service's assessment shows no drop in those they consider 
dangerous and the UK's terror threat level remains at severe general.

The Home Office said: "We don't comment on leaked documents."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/feb/17/counterterrorism-strategy-muslims



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Comments:

So every Muslim is an extremist. Anyone who believes and follows Islam is an 
extremist. 

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