http://www.speroforum.com/site/print.asp?idarticle=7339

 


 <http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idCategory=35&idarticle=7339>
Radical Islam and British Universities: Part One 


 


 




Leading Muslim terrorists have been educated at Britain's universities 

 


 


Friday, January 05, 2007


Adrian <http://www.speroforum.com/site/author.asp?AUTH_ID=201>  Morgan 


 



 

British Universities have long been centers of radicalism, usually of the
brand of amateur socialism espoused by the Socialist Workers Party or its
ugly sisters Militant and the Worker's Revolutionary Party. Pretending to
understand Dialectical Marxism and Trotskyite "permanent revolution", the
leftist radicals infested, and still infest, campuses across Britain. 

Since the 1970s, these activists have promoted the myth of Palestinian
perpetual martyrdom, and portrayed Israel as a bogeyman. During the 1980s,
they supported the women who camped rough outside RAF Greenham Common, a
US-linked air base in Bedfordshire, Britain. Though ignored by most
students, activists promoted an agenda of anti-Americanism and anti-semitism
that has infected at least two generations of post-graduates. 

Ultimately they contributed to British media's fawning over the notion of
Palestinian, and by extension all Muslims', victimhood. Now grown up, the
former student union activists are the first to hurl the term "Islamophobe"
at anyone who questions the spread of radical Islam. In such a climate, it
has been easy for Islamic radicalism to flourish, and even to be welcomed on
Britain's campuses. 

On September 26, 2005, Britain's Social Affairs Unit published a report by
Professor Anthony Glees and Chris Pope from Brunel University. This report,
entitled "When Students Turn To Terror", listed 24 universities where
radicalism flourished, including Birmingham, Brunel, Durham, Leeds, Leeds
Metropolitan, Luton, Leicester, Manchester Metropolitan, Newcastle,
Nottingham, Reading, Swansea, and Wolverhampton.

Coming out while Britain was still reeling from the horrors of 7/7, when 52
people died on London Transport, Professor Glees' report galvanized the UK
media. Already mosques and radical preachers had been named as contributing
factors to the bombings of July 7, 2005. Universities had thitherto been
ignored. Yet Britain's campuses had long been the playgrounds of amateur
radicals and Islamists.

Many leading Muslim terrorists have been educated at Britain's universities.
Azahari bin Husin, the senior bomb-maker from Jemaah Islamiyah who
masterminded the Bali bombings of October 12, 2002 (killing 202 people) and
October 1, 2005 (killing 20), studied at Reading University in the 1990s. He
gained a doctorate in engineering before going off to join Al Qaeda in
Afghanistan.

On February 26, 1993, Ramzi Yousef drove a truck carrying a 1,200 pound bomb
laced with cyanide into the car park beneath the World Trade Center. The
ensuing blast killed six and injured 1,000. Four years before he committed
this atrocity, Yousef completed a degree in engineering at West Glamorgan
Institute (now Swansea Institute of Higher Education).

Dr Rihab Rashid Taha al-Azawi, Saddam Hussein's "Doctor Germ", responsible
for his biological warfare programs, learned her trade in Britain. In 1984,
she gained a PhD in plant toxins at the School of Biological Sciences at the
University of East Anglia.

Individuals such as the above did not flaunt their Islamist credentials at
college. Other individuals in British universities linked to terrorism have
been allowed to lecture. One such person is 52-year old Bashir Musa Mohammed
Nafi, (pictured) who is alleged to be a founder of the terrorist group
Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Like Sami al-Arian, who formerly lectured at the
University of South Florida, Bashir Musa Mohammed Nafi was, as recently as
2003, an occasional lecturer at Birkbeck College at the University of
London. Here, he taught Islamic studies. In the 1990s, Nafi collaborated
with al-Arian in Florida. Accused by the US of being the UK leader of PIJ,
Nafi has denied the claims.

In 2004, Professor Anthony Glees claimed that academics in Britain's
universities were actively hampering attempts by security services to defend
the nation against Islamist threats. He claimed that many academics were
"hostile to the idea of intervention in international affairs and have,
since 1980, harbored strong suspicions of American motives."

In July 2004, the Times reported that two UK universities, the University of
Wales and the University of Loughborough, had given official approval to two
Islamic colleges which supported both the Taliban and terror-group Hamas.
The rector of the Markfield Institute of Higher Education is a member of the
extremist party in Pakistan, the Jamaat-e-Islami, who was said to have
praised the Taliban. Markfield was supported by Loughborough University and
has been praised by the pro-Islamic Prince Charles.

The European Institute of Human Sciences in Llanybydder, West Wales, was
validated by the University of Wales. It teaches Arabic courses inspired by
Yusuf al-Qaradawi, the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Times
claimed.

During the 1990s, a new phenomenon emerged on campuses and colleges in
Britain - that of open radicals who loudly proclaimed their contempt for
Western values, and unequivocally pronouncing their jihadist intentions.

Bizarrely, as Melanie Phillips reported in her book "Londonistan", the
department of MI5 which dealt with radical Islamism was closed in 1994,
while they considered the issue of the IRA to be more important. With the
cat put away, the rats come out to play, in full force. During this hiatus
in surveillance, two groups came to the fore, both connected with the
Syrian-born Islamist preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed.

Bakri had arrived in Britain in 1985 as an "asylum-seeker", after he was
deported from Saudi Arabia for belonging to a group classed as too "extreme"
even for the center of Wahhabism. This group was called "Al-Muhajiroun", or
"the emigrants". Bakri, a former member of the Muslim Brotherhood had
founded this group in Saudi Arabia in 1983 as a front for Hizb ut-Tahrir,
the "revolutionary" Islamist group which is banned in most Middle Eastern
countries.

When he arrived in Britain, Bakri founded the British branch of Hizb
ut-Tahrir. In 1996, he also established Al-Muhajiroun in Britain. These two
groups have the aim of establishing Britain as an Islamist state, and yearn
for the restoration of the Caliphate, a system of Islamic central
government. The last Caliphate, that of the Ottomans, was dissolved in 1924.

On Britain's campuses, the two groups established their influence during the
latter half of the 1990s, particularly after MI5 stopped treating Islam
seriously. Hizb ut-Tahrir members regularly threatened to kill Peter
Tatchell, a homosexual rights campaigner, and Al-Muhajiroun openly
pronounced their hatred of Jews. In the fall of 2000, they hung posters at
university campuses which proclaimed: "The last hour will not come until the
Muslims fight the Jews and the Muslims kill the Jews."

Threats and slogans aside, both groups had a more real danger inherent in
their activities. The presence of Al-Muhajiroun on campuses in various
universities led MI5 to set up a unit to monitor student Islamism at the
dawn of the millennium. In early 2001, Russian authorities urged Britain to
ban Al-Muhajiroun, as their intelligence showed that students from the
London School of Economics had been recruited by the group to become
terrorists in Chechnya.

In December 2000 Mohammed Bilal, a young British Muslim, who had been
studying his "A-levels" at a sixth form college in Birmingham, went to
India. Bilal had links to Al-Muhajiroun. He blew himself up in a stolen car.
This suicide attack at an army barracks in Kashmir killed six soldiers and
three civilians.

In October 2001, Al-Muhajiroun claimed that three British Muslims were
killed by a US rocket attack in Kabul, Afghanistan. The group claimed that
1,000 British Muslims had gone to Afghanistan since 9/11.

In November 2001, Hassan Butt of Al-Muhajiroun announced that five British
Muslims had died in Mazar-i-Sharif in Afghanistan. Butt said: "They all died
as martyrs fighting the so-called coalition against terrorism. They went out
there to fight for the Taliban and were prepared to give their lives."

On January 7, 2002, Butt told the BBC's Today program from his base in
Lahore, Pakistan, that many of the British Muslims in Afghanistan would,
upon their return, launch terror attacks which would "strike at the heart"
of Britain. Butt boasted of personally recruiting 200 people to fight the
coalition.

Bakri cannily denounced Butt's claims, saying that Al-Muhajiroun did not
support military actions. He also said that Butt was no longer a member of
the group and was no longer its spokesman.

Bakri was lying. At a meeting in Sparkbrook in Birmingham, held  less than a
week after 9/11, Al Muhajiroun urged listeners to join the armed jihad
against coalition troops. One speaker said that Muslims who supported the
invasion of Afghanistan were to be urged not to do so. "But if they do not
listen, they are Kufr (unbelievers) too and so it is our duty to fight and
even kill them." Leaflets at the meetings proclaimed: "The final hour will
not come until the Muslims conquer the White House."

In Derby, Bakri used to regularly visit Al-Muhajiroun members, who had a
strong following in the town. In 2000, he told a meeting there that Muslims
must send armies "to fight the aggressors and occupiers and establish the
Khilafah (Caliphate)." He issued a fatwa saying that "the Israeli cancer in
Palestine must be uprooted."

While Al-Muhajiroun targeted students with an attempt to inspire them to
jihad, the other group headed by Omar Bakri Mohammed was making inroads at
universities and colleges throughout Britain. Hizb ut-Tahrir began to
infiltrate student unions and Islamic societies, and its message was equally
uncompromising.

Hizb ut-Tahrir's approach was similarly supportive of violence, and used
intimidation to achieve its ends. Its most notable influence was to force
Muslim women students to wear the hijab or Muslim headscarf. This item had
been only used by the older generation of Muslim women until the 1990s.
Before the campaigns from Hizb ut-Tahrir, the item had hardly been seen on a
campus.

During this decade, while the British government downplayed the seriousness
of Islamic radicalism as part of a global movement towards dominance, the
behavior of Hizb ut-Tahrir should have raised alarm bells. Britain's Channel
4 even made a documentary of Omar Bakri Mohammed, filmed over a year in and
around his base in Tottenham, north London. Screened on April 8, 1997, this
show, entitled "Tottenham Ayatollah" portrayed Bakri as a clownish buffoon.

The documentary's approach was almost consciously misleading. In 1996, Bakri
had tried to invite Osama bin Laden to Britain, to attend an "Islamic
Revival Rally". Though the show supplied evidence of Bakri's preaching of
hatred towards Jews, it was condemned by various Muslim groups. Makbool
Javaid, chair of the Association of Muslim Lawyers, tried to prevent the
broadcast going out.

There was nothing funny about Omar Bakri Mohammed. Before the documentary
was shown, Bakri had addressed 200 students at the Newham College of Further
Education, on Thursday, February 23, 1995. Bakri had a core group of
supporters at this college in east London. The following day an African
student, Ayotunde Obanubi, was stabbed in the arm at the college by a Hizb
ut-Tahrir supporter. On Monday February 27, a group of several Hizb
ut-Tahrir supporting students, led by Saeed Nur, again attacked Mr Obanubi.
The Nigerian student was accused of "insulting Islam". The group was armed
with hammers and knives. Struck on the head with a hammer and stabbed
through the heart, Ayotunde Obanubi died on the steps of the college.
Bakri's followers had claimed their first victim.  

Continued in Part <http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=7340>  II.

 



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