http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/legal/article1963004.ece

Sacked Muslim officer wants police protection
By Robert Verkaik, Legal Affairs Correspondent
Published: 10 November 2006

The Muslim firearms officer who was sacked from an elite Scotland Yard 
unit guarding dignitaries, including Tony Blair, is seeking special 
police protection after he was forced to move to a secret location amid 
fears for the safety of his family.

Pc Amjad Farooq, 39, is suing the Metropolitan Police for race and 
religious discrimination after he was removed from Scotland Yard's 
Diplomatic Protection Group (S016) when he was told he had failed a 
security check because his children went to the same mosque as an imam 
suspected of having links to terrorism.

Yesterday, friends of Pc Farooq said a house where he had been staying 
had been visited by an unknown man who made unfounded accusations 
linking Pc Farooq's friends to al-Qa'ida.

Pc Farooq also feels harassed after an article was published yesterday 
that he believes links him to the international terrorist group.

Friends say that the officer, his wife and five children have been 
exposed to a possible backlash from far right groups after his legal 
action against the Met was made public on Tuesday. He denies any links 
or sympathies with any extremist group.

In a letter to Dr Tim Brain, Chief Constable of Gloucestershire Police, 
Pc Farooq's lawyer, Lawrence Davies, has officially requested police 
protection for his client and his client's family.

The letter makes the police aware of an incident in which an "unnamed 
person approached the person with whom our client is temporary staying 
at a secret location and falsely accused that person of having links to 
the same imam which is entirely untrue".

It also draws the Chief Constable's attention to the behaviour of some 
sections of the press.

"We are writing to thank you for the support you've shown to our client 
during the recent difficult period of press intrusion. The position of 
both parties is that we have refused to comment to the press about his 
case... We have tried to protect the identity of our client but were 
concerned to discover today he had been photographed and his picture 
appeared in the Daily Mail and Daily Express".

Mr Lawrence adds: "Although most of the press comments have been 
balanced, the article in today's Daily Mail was inflammatory and caused 
our client to feel harassed. The article, 'the Al-Qaeda factor' appears 
to link our client to that organisation rather than the former imam at 
his former mosque. We believe the article may lead to our client being 
targeted by far-right groups. We have raised a formal complaint to the 
Press Complaints Commission."

Mr Davies says his client is also concerned how his case has been 
wrongly used by those who want to make British Muslims the scapegoats 
for the threat from international terrorism.

The Muslim firearms officer who was sacked from an elite Scotland Yard 
unit guarding dignitaries, including Tony Blair, is seeking special 
police protection after he was forced to move to a secret location amid 
fears for the safety of his family.

Pc Amjad Farooq, 39, is suing the Metropolitan Police for race and 
religious discrimination after he was removed from Scotland Yard's 
Diplomatic Protection Group (S016) when he was told he had failed a 
security check because his children went to the same mosque as an imam 
suspected of having links to terrorism.

Yesterday, friends of Pc Farooq said a house where he had been staying 
had been visited by an unknown man who made unfounded accusations 
linking Pc Farooq's friends to al-Qa'ida.

Pc Farooq also feels harassed after an article was published yesterday 
that he believes links him to the international terrorist group.

Friends say that the officer, his wife and five children have been 
exposed to a possible backlash from far right groups after his legal 
action against the Met was made public on Tuesday. He denies any links 
or sympathies with any extremist group.

In a letter to Dr Tim Brain, Chief Constable of Gloucestershire Police, 
Pc Farooq's lawyer, Lawrence Davies, has officially requested police 
protection for his client and his client's family.

The letter makes the police aware of an incident in which an "unnamed 
person approached the person with whom our client is temporary staying 
at a secret location and falsely accused that person of having links to 
the same imam which is entirely untrue".

It also draws the Chief Constable's attention to the behaviour of some 
sections of the press.

"We are writing to thank you for the support you've shown to our client 
during the recent difficult period of press intrusion. The position of 
both parties is that we have refused to comment to the press about his 
case... We have tried to protect the identity of our client but were 
concerned to discover today he had been photographed and his picture 
appeared in the Daily Mail and Daily Express".

Mr Lawrence adds: "Although most of the press comments have been 
balanced, the article in today's Daily Mail was inflammatory and caused 
our client to feel harassed. The article, 'the Al-Qaeda factor' appears 
to link our client to that organisation rather than the former imam at 
his former mosque. We believe the article may lead to our client being 
targeted by far-right groups. We have raised a formal complaint to the 
Press Complaints Commission."

Mr Davies says his client is also concerned how his case has been 
wrongly used by those who want to make British Muslims the scapegoats 
for the threat from international terrorism.

+++



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