Driving Islam Underground: Generation Under Siege Than
Generation Jihad
13 February 2010By Mustaqim Bleher
Attacking ordinary Muslims has become the relentless
pastime of a government and media that have lost their
purpose. Be it the banning of Islam4UK as a group
allegedly sympathising with terrorism, the French
hullaballoo about fining women who want to cover their
faces or the Swiss ban on minarets (with its leading
campaigner since having converted to Islam!), they are
all attempts by desperate governments and corrupt
self-serving politicians to channel the anger at their
own mismanagement into a different direction, hoping
that their popularity might recover from its current
depths by beating a scapegoat. And the media lap it up
as it makes for cheap programme thrillers without
requiring much original research or investigative
journalism.
The BBC has just sunk to its lowest with a poorly
scripted, badly presented and amateurishly filmed
series called "Generation Jihad" in which John Taylor
wants to scare viewers into believing that a whole
generation of British-born Muslims are being
radicalised and either ponder about carrying out a
terror attack on their neighbours or at least admire
those who do. His whole first episode, shot low-budget
at a barber's, a meat shop and a basketball court,
centres around two Muslims, Rizwan Ditta and Bilal
Mohammed, who were convicted under the UK's draconian
anti-terror laws for possessing material likely to be
of use to terrorists. Similar charges have been
brought against scores of young Muslims in their teens
and twens, for a trivial a crime as possessing a copy
of "The anarchist's cookbook", ab book in wide
circulation since the days of the Vietnam war. It
actually carries an ISBN number. Maybe it is
unreliable sources like this that explain why the
explosives produced by the "shoe bomber" or the
"underwear bomber" quickly disappeared in an
embarrassing flash?
Since Taylor broadcast some of this material likely to
be of such valuable use to would-be terrorists, he
should be arrested and imprisoned for at least 20
years, not just the 2 years those poor souls
interviewed by him served, in order to save the
British licence payer (you have to pay for the BBC if
you own equipment capable of receiving a TV broadcast,
irrespective of whether you watch it or not, and can
go to prison if you don't comply) further shaky out-of
focus shots giving the impression that in order to
qualify as a cameraman for the BBC it is now
sufficient to simply be able to point the lens of the
camera at least somewhere in the right direction.
Taylor's excuse would probably be that the material
was in the public domain anyway, the same reason why
Mohammad Atif Siddique had just had his conviction
overturned. Unfortunately for Yorkshiremen Rizwan
Ditta and Bilal Mohammed they had pleaded guilty,
probably to reduce their sentence or to ward of an
extradition to the USA, an infinitely worse evil than
spending a couple of years in a British prison.
The lack of convictions for real terrorist offences
has led the police and security services to charge and
convict Muslim individuals for thought crimes in order
to justify the huge sums spent on counter-terrorism
measures. But the criminalisation of the innocent goes
a lot further. Since the "underwear bomber" Umar Faruk
Abdulmuttalab once attended University College London
and was elected president of the Islamic Society there
during 2006 and 2007, the counter-terrorism command of
the Metropolitan Police obtained the membership
records of Islamic Society members for the years 2006
- 2009 together with those of the Islamic Medical
Society from the Students Union who put up little
resistance against the request. Those members' data
will be held on file for seven years to come and
shared with foreign security services, although there
is not a shred of evidence that they were involved in
anything but legitimate student activities. Neither
the BBC nor any other mainstream media found the story
worth reporting, which was only covered as headline
item by the Muslim News.
Yet, the ramifications are immense and deal another
blow to freedom of speech, freedom of association and
freedom of action in the UK. The UK already has the
most surveillance cameras per individual, it's
stop-and-search police powers have recently found to
be illegal by the European Court of Human Rights, a
British appeal court just censored the British
government from hiding its knowledge of complicity in
torture under the spurious excuse of national
security, and the UK also has the strictest gagging
laws in the Western world, matching, if not exceeding,
those available in China it regularly criticises:
Newspapers are frequently issued with orders not to
report a specific event, even a parliamentary
question, and are then even prevented from disclosing
that such an order was served on them. No wonder
investigative journalism is a dying art in the UK and
the media go for the safe pastime of Muslim-bashing.
For Muslims it means, retreat into the ghetto or get
picked on, and if you want to get involved in any
activity at all, keep it stumm.
Gone are decades of work trying to bring Muslim
aspirations into the mainstream environment, get
Muslims to identify as British citizens or even feel
proud of their and their country's achievements. After
fledgling attempts of getting involved in society and
politics, British Muslims are back retreating into
their own unformalised networks. More like "Generation
under Siege" than "Generation Jihad".
What would be worth investigating by the BBC, if they
still prided themselves for original work, would be
the tactics used by the security services and the
police in radicalising young Muslims themselves in
order to justify the fight against them. Just like
minors are being sent into shops to buy cigarettes or
alcohol, watched by adult handlers, who then bring
charges against the shop keepers, our security
services actively promote the expression of radical
Islamic views in order to then bring a successful
prosecution. Umar Abdulmuttalab was, upon the
available evidence, also actively recruited and
handled by the security services.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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