Staff

Staff

Denial of equal citizenship is what unites the Hindus of Bangladesh, Rohingyas in Myanmar and Muslims in India. But all stakeholders seem to look at them through the prism of ‘Islamophobia’

In West Bengal, the Rohingya issue has had some play in public discourse. There are a few Rohingya refugees in West Bengal. The Union government has announced that it considers them as illegal immigrants and not refugees and hence liable to be deported.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has made her stance clear while saying that it is a humanitarian issue and she would not allow any Rohingya refugee to be deported from West Bengal. The Union government’s attitude on this humanitarian issue has been one of inhumanity, given its otherwise open-door policy on not deporting persecuted religious minorities from neighbouring states.

Thus, Sunni Muslim minorities persecuted in their homeland are not fit for even token verbal compassion compared to other persecuted religious minority groups. Like Sheikh Hasina, in the eyes of anti-Muslim Hindu communal forces, Mamata Banerjee too is a minority appeaser. The few Muslim refugees have apparently plans to completely Islamise West Bengal under the watchful and wilful actions of Mamata Banerjee, who they also accuse of being a closet Muslim.

The fantastic, bordering on the insane, claims of this political front of West Bengal feeds off partly from the Delhi’s plan of making West Bengal a vassal state, an extension of the Hindi-Hindu-Hindustan hegemonic space, partly from the pathological hatred of Muslims many of them actually harbour and partly from the action of Islamists in West Bengal.

Rohingya cause not helped by rabid protests

For example, on this Rohingya issue, multiple protests were held in West Bengal. In Kolkata, the consulate was gheraoed by students and youths. Islamists didn’t join. Some Muslims did. Various hues of Islamists held their own protests. The one by the Student Islamic Organization (SIO) held banners which talked about ‘genocide of Muslims in Burma’, without even mentioning the term Rohingya!

This is ironic because it at this point the crisis still does not fulfil the internationally accepted definition of genocide, neither is it only Muslims who have been affected among the Rohingyas and Burma is now Myanmar, a name change that reflects an ideological shift.

Another such protest by Islamists in Kolkata had a prominent Urdu-speaking loudmouth, with the self-certified authority of talking on the behalf of the 95% Bengali speaking Muslims of Bengal, conjuring up gory images of mass violence. He said that ‘our’ (‘Muslims’ as he imagines them) people might lay down 72 lives but will make sure that the other side has one lakh funerals.

Such things were said in broad daylight peppered by chants of Allah Hu Akbar. One of the main organisers of this protest was also one of the main organisers of the biggest protest in Kolkata (and read the next bit carefully because this is quite amazing and shocking) in support of war criminals of the 1971 Bangladesh genocide!

These are the kind of elements and characters that the Rohingyas find to have risen in their support and that does not help the Rohingya cause. But the utterly friendless Rohingyas cannot practically do much about it, even if they wanted to. And that is the tragedy of the Rohingyas.

Rohingyas victims of the scum of the earth

The Christian fundamentalist nonchalance of USA, the imperial Hindi-Hindu-Hindustan ideology of the Indian Union, the local variants of a hardline pan-Islamist ideology in Bangladesh, West Bengal and in Rakhine state and Burmese Buddhist ethno-nationalism of Myanmar are the major narrative shapers here among the stakeholders. It is an intersection of stupendous hate from an assemblage that collectively represents a significant section of the scum of the earth. The Rohingyas are in the middle of it. And every other ideological ‘enemy’ of the different stakeholders are smaller co-victims.

And yet, the Rohingya issue and all the associated victims of communally inspired oppression, are also products of colonialism and the inherited political and structural nature of the successor states. And these narratives of competitive hate often miss out on the various powerless ones, counted as members of such armies of hate.

Thinker and political activist Khalid Anis Ansari of Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh, drives this point home – “Rohingya is an ethnic issue and a product of the constitutive violence of the nation-state in general. Homologically, it needs to be placed alongside the Tibet, Kashmir, Baloch and other similar conflicts. The framing of the Rohingya violence through the 'Islamophobic' lens (a replay of the Kashmir conflict) is part of the white imperial 'clash of civilisations' project and legitimises all right wing 'native' voices, through competition and symbiosis, thereby excluding subaltern concerns.”

History bears this out. It had different names in different times. From the Rohingyas of Myanmar to the Hindus of Bangladesh to the Muslims of Hindustan, what unites most of them is a lack of equal citizenship./ nationalheraldindia

The decision comes despite de facto leader Aun San Suu Kyi defending her country against the accusations in person last month.

Thousands of Rohingya died and more than 700,000 fled to Bangladesh during an army crackdown in 2017.

UN investigators have warned that genocidal actions could recur.

The ICJ case, lodged by the African Muslim-majority nation of The Gambia, called for emergency measures against the Myanmar military until a fuller investigation could be launched.

More than half a million Muslims are still believed to live in Myanmar’s Rakhine state./ tvcnews

A group of Muslim students from a government college in the southern Indian state of Karnataka have sat outside their classroom for weeks listening to lessons after their principal refused to allow them to wear hijab to class.

The four students of the government women’s college in Udupi have been camping outside their classroom since the beginning of the month alleging that they were not being allowed to wear headscarves while in class, Indian media outlets reported.

College principal Rudra Gowda was quoted by news agency Press Trust of India as saying that the students were allowed to wear hijab in the school premises, but not inside the classrooms, citing college rules.

Earlier, the parents of the four students in a standoff with the college met the authorities but there was no resolution of the issue for over a fortnight, television channel Times Now reported. The principal has said the college will soon call for a meeting with the parents of the women to resolve the issue and explain the rules and regulations of the college, the channel reported.

College Development Committee vice president Yashpal Suvarna told the Deccan Herald newspaper on Saturday that none of the 150 women from minority communities studying in the college “have raised any (similar) demands.”

“The college has its own rules, regulations and disciplinary procedures. The uniform was introduced to offer an egalitarian approach to education, as there are many poor women studying in the college,” he said.

“They can attend classes if they are willing to follow the rules of the college. If they are not willing to follow the rules, they can find some other college to get an education,” he added.

Muslims make up about 14 per cent of India’s population of 1.3 billion and are a minority with Hindus forming about 80 per cent.

A similar incident occurred early this month at another college in the state.

Hindu students came to a state-run degree college in Koppa wearing saffron scarves to protest their Muslim classmates attending classes in hijab.

The college in Balagadi reportedly gave in to the demands from both sections and allowed students to wear what they wanted for a limited number of days.

“We are convening a parent-teachers meeting which will also be attended by public representatives on January 10 to resolve the issue. The decision arrived at would be a binding on everyone,” principal Ananth Murthy told PTI at that time.

The colour saffron is associated with Hinduism./ usatodaynews

Ethnic divisions in Bosnia-Herzegovina have continued to widen this week as Bosnian Serbs, encouraged by their leaders, reportedly harassed Bosniak Muslim neighborhoods, sang songs in the streets celebrating war criminals, and even fired shots near mosques. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe released a statement blaming Bosnian Serb leaders, whose “growing use of inflammatory, divisive rhetoric…is contributing to the proliferation of such incidents.” Bosnian Serb president Milorad Dodik has for months been slowly dissolving the bonds that hold multi-ethnic Bosnia-Herzegovina together. Last year, Dodik proclaimed his intention to separate the institutions of the Republika Srpska, a component republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina, from the national government and create a new, strengthened, and exclusively Bosnian Serb army.

The crisis in Bosnia has attracted responses from across the globe. An article by UN Dispatch warned Bosnia-Herzegovina is on the “brink of Political Disintegration,” and is “facing its deepest political crisis since the civil war in the 1990s.”

Western governments across the EU and the Atlantic have condemned Dodik, piling on sanctions while urging Bosnian Serbs to keep within the bounds of the Dayton Accords. Russia and China have implicitly backed Dodik’s posturing, as has nearby authoritarian Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban, who last month promised to block EU sanctions on Dodik and provide the Republika Srpska with €100 million. A report from High Representative Christian Schmidt, appointed by EU and U.S. officials, was blocked from appearing before the Security Council by Russia.

Bosnia-Herzegovina’s history gives plenty of reason for concern. As Yugoslavia burned away in the 1990s ethnic conflicts savagely tore through the former country, resulting in death, displacement, and genocide on a scale not seen since the Second World War. The violence was particularly acute in Bosnia, where the interspersed communities of Bosniak Muslim, Serbian Orthodox, and Croatian Catholics fought for over a decade, with attacks on civilians being widespread, but often suffered most severely by Bosniak Muslims. The most famous incident may be the Srebrenica Massacre, also called the Srebrenica Genocide, in 1995, where at least 8,000 Bosniak Muslims were killed by Bosnian Serbs.

The Dayton Accords ended the fighting, but a desperation to end the brutality resulted in a rushed, intentionally temporary solution, which has unfortunately persisted for nearly three decades. The solution brought forth by the U.S .and UN created a power sharing government in Bosnia-Herzegovina, splitting the country into the majority-Serb Republika Srpska and the Croat-Bosniak-majority Federation of Bosnia-Herzegovina. Though this stopped the killing, it did nothing to address deeper issues, and functionally rewarded Bosnian Serbs and entrenched ethnic divisions.

With eyes on Eastern Europe, Dodik may bet on Western hands being too full prevent him from implementing his plans, and with encouragement both locally and internationally, little stands in his way.

Bosnia-Herzegovina truly hangs in the balance, and the consequences of its collapse present possibilities too horrific to contemplate. Dodik has said he won’t start a war, but actions speak louder than words, and the region’s history speaks for itself. Divisive rhetoric, like Dodik calling Bosniaks “second-rate people” and “treacherous converts,” have consequences. A repeat of past violence, on any scale, should be a priority to avoid. Regardless of political affiliation, or the blackening influence of renewed Russia-EU/US neo-Cold War tensions, the lives of thousands in Bosnia-Herzegovina and across the Balkans may be in danger, and no one stands to gain from war and death.

World leaders, especially in the EU, need to act before another genocide begins, not after. A group based in the Netherlands called Platform BiH has organized protests across the world. Aljazeera reported protests in 35 cities from the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo to Washington D.C., decrying Dodik’s divisive actions and urging Western governments to act. In a statement, Platform BiH said that protestors “want to send a simple message to world officials that divisions and conflicts must not happen again. They want the EU and the USA to act in time, preventively, not reactively like in the 1990s.”/ theowp

Following an underwater volcanic eruption that hit the Pacific country of Tonga, a weather center issued a tsunami warning for the western coast of US and Canada.

According to a statement by the Tsunami Warning Center of US National Weather Service, a tsunami warning has been issued for the west coast of the US from Alaska to California, and the west coast of Canada.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said Hawaii could also be affected, but damage to other islands hit by tsunami so far is minimal.

The volcano, located 65-kilometers north of Tonga capital Nuku'alofa, had begun spewing ash, steam and gas Friday morning.

Tonga is a Polynesian kingdom of more than 170 South Pacific islands.

Authorities said the volcanic eruptions were seven times more severe than those on Dec. 20, 2021.

Meanwhile, the National Office of Emergency of the Interior Ministry in Chile also issued a tsunami warning for San Felix Island, Juan Fernandez Archipelago and Easter Island, located in the Antarctic and Pacific Ocean.

It asked the public to evacuate the coastal areas on the islands, and follow the instructions of the authorities./aa

Ethiopia announced Friday that it withdrew support for a national, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, after his remarks accused the government of blocking humanitarian aid to the Tigray region.

In a letter to the WHO’s Executive Board, the government stated its objection to Tedros’ "moral, legal and professional standing," and claimed it "threatened" WHO's organizational integrity.

It urged the WHO to commission an investigation on Tedros to identify his "misconduct and violation of his professional and legal responsibility."

The letter also said the WHO chief of "interfering in the internal affairs" of Ethiopia, including relations of the East African country with Eritrea.

Ethiopia denied Thursday that it obstructed aid deliveries to Tigray, accusing Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) rebels of engaging in “serious acts that hampered food and non-food aid deliveries to the region.”

The TPLF said the accusations “makes no sense.”

Tedros urged that “humanitarian access should be allowed at all times even during conflict.”

“Even conflict cannot be an excuse because we're delivering medicine in conflict areas while the conflict is raging so that place cannot be different. Then the other part, of course, this thing should be resolved politically, peacefully. If there is a commitment to resolve it peacefully there is a way. There is a way to resolve it peacefully and politically,” he added.

Tedros, who served as Ethiopia’s foreign minister when the TPLF dominated Ethiopian politics, became the first African WHO director in 2017 with the full support of many countries as a result of Ethiopia's efforts.

The Executive Committee will meet at the end of January and determine new director-general candidates for election in May.

Kenya, Rwanda and Botswana previously announced their support for Tedros’ reinstatement.

Tigray on brink of humanitarian disaster as aid grinds to halt

A statement by the World Food Programme (WFP) warned Friday that its operations, like other aid organizations operating in Northern Tigray, are about to grind to a halt because intense fighting has blocked the passage of fuel and food.

“We’re now having to choose who goes hungry to prevent another from starving,” Michael Dunford, WFP’s regional director for Eastern Africa, said in a statement. “We need immediate guarantees from all parties to the conflict for safe and secure humanitarian corridors, via all routes, across northern Ethiopia. Humanitarian supplies are simply not flowing at the pace and scale needed. The lack of both food and fuel means we’ve only been able to reach 20% of those we should have in this latest distribution in Tigray. We’re on the edge of a humanitarian disaster.”

The aid agency noted that the war that has lasted for more than a year has left 9.4 million people in urgent need of humanitarian food assistance, an increase of 2.7 million from four months ago.

Away from the war, WFP also warned that it will likely run out of food and nutrition supplies for millions of Ethiopians from next month because of an unprecedented lack of funding./aa

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has once again spoken out against Islamophobia and racism in the West. Erdogan complained that the European Union (EU) has maintained silence, setting aside important issues such as establishing a common immigration policy, xenophobia or foreign-fear, and Islamophobia or Islam-fear.

They have not taken any significant steps in these important matters. But Turkey is a country where there is no animosity, no fear of foreigners or lack of security. Turkish law stipulates strict measures against any form of hatred. Turkey is a candidate country for EU membership. As president, Erdogan said Turkey was continuing to negotiate with the bloc (EU) on supply chains, immigration, defense, xenophobia and Islamophobia, health and energy. He said that Turkey has a role to play in resolving any issue.

The EU’s relationship with Ankara must move forward. In his annual meeting with the ambassadors of EU member states, Erdogan said that in the new year, the European Union should move away from its “short-sightedness” with Turkey and work more boldly to improve relations with Ankara. President Erdogan also accused the alliance of trying to sour relations between the EU and Turkey on the pretext of solidarity. He said the EU must work against such practices.

He added that “Turkey is working to establish a diplomatic relationship through negotiations.” In addition to high-level visits and discussions, we have participated in high-level dialogues on climate change, security, migration and healthcare. However, Erdogan said that despite the positive steps taken by Turkey, there was no response from the European Union./IT

We all must have come across the now infamous advertisement of the Uttar Pradesh government, which shows two frames – in one, a rioter is seen pelting something which looks like a Molotov cocktail with fierce anger in his eyes, and the other shows him with folded hands, possibly in a police station, standing in front of a notice board which has his photo under the “wanted” list.

The point to note is that in the first frame, the man is wearing a kaffiyeh, the headdress worn by Arab (read Muslim) men. The Islamophobic advert, thus, very subtly labels Muslims as rioters and terrorists, a fact which is being promoted by a democratically elected, constitutionally secular and supposedly inclusive government, using taxpayers’ money.

Isn’t Yogi Adityanath’s Vilification of Muslims a Violation of His Oath?

This ‘official’ vilification of Muslims is a matter of serious concern because it not only jeopardises the security of common Indian citizens who happen to follow Islam, but also puts under scrutiny the intent of a regime which is under oath to protect its citizens.

To remind you, on 26 March 2017, Ajay Mohan Bisht, alias Yogi Adityanath, had promised the citizens of Uttar Pradesh that he will duly and faithfully and to the best of his ability, knowledge, and judgement perform the duties of his office without fear or favour, affection or ill-will and that he will uphold the Constitution and the laws.

Though only an oath, we now come to realise how important it is to administer this oath to our political executives. And, more importantly, how crucial it is for them to follow this oath.

Shouldn’t those who violate this oath fall in the category of ‘anti-nationals’? Nothing can be more anti-national than to disrespect the constitution of the country.

But alas! Mr Bisht seems to have forgotten the fact that he is still a chief minister under oath.

In a country where diversity of identity has a civilisational context, the publication of such hate-provoking advertisements is nothing more than a legalisation of xenophobia in general and Islamophobia in particular.

Hatred against minorities now has the official stamp of the government. The conquest of minds through media manipulation is a well-established technique in the armamentarium of the current regime.

Most right-wing regimes across the globe try and use these methods, but with deeply engrained roots of liberty, democracy, and justice, most of these regimes are forced to remain at the cusp of sanity.

US President Donald Trump’s xenophobia was met with a stone wall in the form of American judiciary. Unfortunately, this wall in India is merely a smokescreen.

Islamophobia is Not Just an Election Tactic Anymore

A deeper evaluation of this advertisement by the UP government reveals many more hideous layers. Some are trivialising it by calling it just an electoral game-plan of the ruling party. Unfortunately, it is much more than that.

Legalising hate against Muslims is the beginning of the process of legalising hate against anyone and everyone whom the regime considers an enemy or an adversary. Imagine an advert a few years (or maybe months) down the line with the same viciousness against Christians, Sikhs, Dalits, or Adivasis.

This is a reality which becomes possible, because right now, the middle-class, metrocentric, mediocrity-hating, privileged Indian maintains a deafening silence of acceptance against the trashing, lynching, otherisation, and hate against Muslims. In nation states, unchecked and unchallenged hate against one cohort of citizens is a visa for future hate against others.

The hate speeches delivered at the Dharam Sansad in Haridwar a few weeks ago only ratifies the idea of creating and bashing the Muslim community as an enemy. Speakers called for an outright Muslim genocide. This was part and parcel of that same legitimisation process which Adityanath’s regime aims to achieve subtly through the advert in question.

The call for genocide of Muslims in India is not just a law and order situation. It is a matter of grave concern. It is, thus, not surprising that the poisonous speeches which call for the extermination of one of the largest Muslim populations on the planet are met with eerie silence from the highest executive official of the regime.

Otherisation and Hate – The Genocide Playbook 

The Rwandan genocide is a classic example of how the regime slowly wound itself like a python around the minority Tutsis through an orchestrated campaign of hate, otherisation, and allegations.

The genocide of the Tutsi tribe didn’t happen in an instant in those hundred days in 1994, when more than one million men, women, and children were slaughtered with primitive weapons like machete and nail embedded clubs. It started right at the time of Rwandan independence.

In 1959, Joseph Gitera, leader of Aprosoma, a radical Hutu political party, openly called for the elimination of the Tutsi ‘vermin’.

The RTLM, now the infamous Rwanda Radio, invited Hutu political leaders and called Tutsis ‘snakes’ and ‘cockroaches’ waiting to be exterminated. Back home, Home Minister Amit Shah’s remarks terming the Muslims of Bengal “termites” should be seen with the same cautious realism.

His being the incharge of homeland security of the country should only add apprehension to our understanding of his vicious comments against Muslims.

Why It is in Our Vested Interest to Fight Islamophobia

In her important book, Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire, Deepa Kumar enumerating the post 9/11 islamophobia in the United States suggests that a struggle against islamophobia is also in the interests of the vast majority of Americans, who have had trillions of dollars stolen from their healthcare, education, infrastructure, and public transportation, and funnelled into the machinery of death.

Working-class Americans of all races have nothing to gain from the spoils of empire – and everything to lose [sic].

The same logic to fight islamophobia and xenophobia applies to common Indians like me and you.

We are within the debris of an ongoing pandemic which has claimed millions of our countrymen. Cultivation of hatred against Muslims is a logical solution for the bigoted regime to distract us from asking difficult questions.

Having said this, the hate against Muslims which is so pervasive in the Indian society right now is not only a means to distract us. It is real. It has a historical context. The crossroads of history and reality is a dangerous chasm. Most, if not all, genocides can be shown to lie at this junction.

As citizens of a liberal and democratic society, we cannot hide behind the ‘banality of evil’. Dehumanising language, adverts, and actions when coming from elected representatives of the state should alert us like the sweet fragrance of flowers in air heralding the onset of spring. Let’s be clear that a genocide in the air is a genocide in the making; and a genocide in the making is a genocide in waiting.

By DR SHAH ALAM KHAN

 thequint.com

Islamophobia is not a new concept, but it continues to regenerate.

Muslims aren’t surprised when a new year brings with it fresh instances of Islamophobia.

In January 2021, a four-year-old in the West Midland was referred to Prevent, the government’s controversial anti-terrorism scheme, over a game of Fortnight (parents said the police turned up to their home at 10:30 at night).

In February, the first female secretary general to the Muslim Council of Britain, Zara Mohammed, was subjected to a hostile interview on the BBC, and forced to negate the “backward”, sexist ways of her religion.

By March, two schools in Birmingham and Slough were being told to train Muslim students to effectively spy on one another, according to Prevent Watch, a community-led initiative that monitors the Prevent scheme.

Later in the year, anti-Muslim hate showed its face again when MP David Amess’s tragic killing in October led to death threats to British Somalis.

Then in November, Azeem Rafiq’s heart-wrenching testimony of the racism he faced in cricket – which included having alcohol forced down his throat as a teenager – also opened people’s eyes to the normalisation of Islamophobia.

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And as last year came to a close and a new year gets underway, the Nationality and Borders bill, which is set to give powers to revoke British citizenship (as in the case of Shamima Begum), is making its progress through parliament, leaving dual-nationals and Muslims in precarious situations.

These are not isolated examples. In the past decade, we’ve seen anti-Asian and anti-Muslim sentiments propagated by a range of factors: the Brexit debate; a media that gives 357% more coverage of terrorism where the perpetrators happen to be Muslim; and government prevarication over the definition of Islamophobia.

Muslims have been subject to discrimination for generations and continue to reel from its modern-day impact. Despite Islamophobia playing out in politics, education, media and the workplace, very little seems to be shifting – why?

The effect of Islamophobia

In her new book, Tangled in Terror, author, podcaster and poet Suhaiymah Manzoor-Khan, 27, says Islamophobia is not a new concept, predating 9/11 and, in the UK, the events of 7/7, by decades, even centuries.

“Discourse about Muslims being associated with patriarchy and illiberal norms have been part of the British imaginary for not just the last 20 years but since British imperialism and British colonialism,” she tells HuffPost UK.

“The image of Muslims as barbarians, as outsiders is present in the 1800s and even earlier than that, some historians would argue.”

Manzoor-Khan believes any productive conversation about Islamophobia has been hijacked by the pressure to name examples or give definitions of it.

In her book, she explains that she is more interested in its effects – what Islamophobia actually does to Muslims – and particularly how a preoccupation with convincing people of the reality of Islamophobia distracts from the stealth harm happening to Muslims and other racialised people.

“Islamophobia in Britain has become a tool to distract us from the real, serious violence that we face on a systemic scale,” she tells HuffPost UK.

“Covid has made that so obvious – that actually because of the adherence to this idea that the economy matters more than real human lives, we’ve allowed for systemic murder of elderly people, ill people, disabled people, chronically ill people, and the disproportionate deaths of people of colour – due to systemic racism.

“Islamophobia also allows us to be distracted from 10 years of austerity, from all sorts of cuts and all the kind of violence that makes us alienated from one another, puts us into poverty, and in the way of death and harm.”

“If you can’t say ‘somebody tried to rip my hijab off’ or ‘somebody spat at me and called me a terrorist’, then it’s almost seen as Islamophobia has barely impacted you."”

- SUHAIYMAH MANZOOR-KHAN, AUTHOR

How does Islamophobia impact her personally? “This is such a tricky question, because we often reduce Islamophobia to simply slurs and microaggressions,” says Manzoor-Khan.

“So if you can’t say ‘somebody tried to rip my hijab off’ or ‘somebody spat at me and called me a terrorist’, then it’s almost seen as Islamophobia has barely impacted you. But the reality is that Islamophobia has affected me at every level of everything. As soon as I stand on the street, in any institution that I go into, I’m visibly Muslim, and I’m associated with all of those caricatures.”

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These often divide along gender lines: the image of the barbaric, patriarchal and predatory Muslim man; and the submissive, oppressed woman. And for too many Muslims growing up in the global west, our time is spent trying to prove these preconceptions otherwise, instead of just living our lives free of labels, stereotypes and explanations.

As Manzoor-Khan sees it: “We’ve wasted years where we could have been organising against racism more broadly and the roots of white supremacy, including anti-Blackness, but instead, we’ve tried to make ourselves appear palatable and distance ourselves from violence.”

Islamophobia in politics

The current political backdrop is particularly disastrous for Muslims and other minorities.

In Boris Johnson, we have a prime minister who has likened Muslim women to letterboxes, a comment that was linked to a 375% rise in hate crimes. During the pandemic, the government appointed Trevor Phillips, a man who was suspended from the Labour party for Islamophobia, to lead a review into Covid deaths, something that has disproportionately affected the Muslim community.

But at a time when governmental policies and actions impinge directly on Muslim lives, they also make it hard to voice opposition or activism.

Dr Khadijah Elshayyal, a research fellow at the University of Edinburgh and author of Muslim Identity Politics: Islam, Activism & Equality in Britain, believes a kind of orchestrated Islamophobia excludes Muslims from public life.

“Muslim activism and our existence in the public sphere has progressively been undercut directly through actions and policies of government,” she says.

“Muslim organisations, activists, personalities and individuals are scrutinised in ways that are almost impossible to live up to. And the possibility for engaging with the government and by extension, with other public parties, is conditional to adherence to British values as defined and stipulated by the government.”

Dr Elshayyal calls it “a losing battle”.

“Government ministers and representatives will name and blacklist Muslim individuals and organisations and in doing so, render them a pariah in the public space and make it impossible for them to have independent voices that may be dissenting from government police,” she says.

“At the same time, the government will amplify voices which support their agenda. What this does is make it impossible for Muslims to pursue genuinely independent political activism or to engage in public life with integrity.”

Islamophobia in education

While most 18-year-olds can go off to university without worrying how their faith may be weaponised against them, many Muslims are quickly reminded that there are limitations on their student experience.

Ayo Olatunj, 25, a medical student from London, believes Islamophobia is alive and flourishing on campus. Serving as a vice-president of student affairs in 2016, Olatunj heard about many cases of Islamophobia in UK universities.

“I’ve seen Muslim organisers being told they can’t chair their own events, being forced to have a ‘neutral chair’, and being refrained from speaking on certain issues such as Palestine,” he says.

“Muslim speakers had their freedom curbed and were under undue scrutiny, and faced a lot of bureaucracy when they wanted to hold events, talks, and dinners. Bureaucracy is often used to make things like planning an event, booking a room or inviting a Muslim speaker much more difficult and arduous.

“It’s in the little inner workings of the system, and the bureaucracy that is used to make the lives of Muslim students harder, [which] makes it more difficult for Muslim students to thrive at campus, to express their religious and political views in the ways that other university students are very easily able to.”

Olatunj recalls how in 2019, King’s College London barred ‘troublemaker’ students from campus during a visit by the Queen – eight of the 10 who were barred were Muslim students.

A damning independent report published a month later found that the university had “overstepped their authority” when it created its disgruntled list and later disabled electronic cards belonging to 13 students who were barred from entering exam halls, libraries and even residential halls for five hours.

Olatunj has first-hand experience of student activism himself and says the “personal and mental damage” of these curbs is very real. “Such actions serve to traumatise and repel Muslims from engaging in activism,” he says.

He believes that universities need to work much harder to foster a safer, happier environment for Muslims. “It’s policy, individual enactment and action, from academics, from staff, from management, all the way from the top to the bottom, that need to work the solution.”

Azeezat Johnson, 33, a research fellow at Queen Mary University, says that Islamophobia also occurs at the level of academic staff, and can happen to even the most esteemed figures. But, she says, it can also be challenged.

“As we see the government honing their skills in building a culture of fear, I think the question of challenging Islamophobia becomes all the more important,” she tells HuffPost UK. “Part of what needs to be addressed is how Islamophobia is maintained by the constant absence of minoritised people (including minoritised Muslims) from institutions of power. Or rather our absence from places of power within these institutions.”

It’s not just a case of improving optics. “That doesn’t mean hiring just the one Muslim who can blend into the already existing academic structures,” she says.

“It means putting resources behind the work of people who’ve been having more nuanced conversations about Islamophobia in their kitchens, than I’ve heard in some seminar rooms.

“It requires creating space to actually listen to and honour the different perspectives that inform scholarship/knowledge. That’s how I want to see Islamophobia being challenged.”

Islamophobia in the media

Our media all too often scapegoats Muslims, too, whether on news channels or in blockbuster films. A recent and extensive report by the Centre for Media Monitoring, which analysed the British media’s coverage of Muslims and Islam between 2018 and 2020, revealed some dire findings.

Researchers found that one in 10 online articles misrepresent Muslims, and 82% of misrepresentation (including biases, sticking to stereotypes) came from news reporting – almost 60% of articles across all publications were identified as associating negative aspects and behaviour with Muslims or Islam.

Faisal Hanif on Islam in the media: "Everyone from international terror groups to ordinary Muslim citizens are lumped together."

The report’s author Faisal Hanif, a media monitoring analysthas spent the past three years pouring over print, digital and broadcast journalism for the report.

“We found that one in five articles is centred around the theme of terrorism/extremism where an identifier of Muslims and/or Islam is mentioned. So, everyone from international terror groups to ordinary Muslim citizens are lumped together.”

So, how does the media achieve this? “Language is one of the key drivers,” explains Hanif. “Despite regulations and editorial guidelines saying quite clearly that a person’s religious affiliation should only be mentioned when genuinely relevant to the story, when it comes to Muslim the relevance is very elastic and found in everything from terrorism, crime, racism, anti-Semitism and any negative aspect or behaviour you can think of.

“These things are then regurgitated in areas of fictional representation of Muslims particularly in dramas on screen where Muslims are then represented as intolerant and out of sync with the rest of society.”

When Islamophobia operates at every level and in all areas of society, Muslims grow up feeling misunderstood, unimportant, and terrified. They don’t just see hostility towards their faith on TV, but in their schools, universities, work places, and in government. And the result is exhausting.

In 2022, Islamophobia will persist, but Muslims such as Manzoor-Khan, Olatunj and many others are not buying into the distraction of convincing people of their humanity. Instead, they’ll be fighting against all forms of bigotry and building a more radically compassionate, equal, and freer world./huffingtonpost


The issue of 'Dharma Sansad' held in Haridwar and Raipur recently, and hate speeches against the Muslim community in Delhi can be discussed in the US Parliament. According to the news published in the English newspaper The Telegraph, Indian expatriate groups living in the US, as well as international organizations like Genocide Watch and Amnesty International, are trying to hear in the US Parliament on the call related to the genocide of Muslims in India. Also Read - AAP Proposes 13 point Agenda For Goa Polls As per the report, recently the American Holocaust Museum has placed India in second place in the list of countries at risk of mass murders.

Since then such efforts have gained momentum. Gregory Stanton, president of Genocide Watch, has given information about this at a parliamentary briefing organized by organizations associated with the overseas Indian community. According to the reports he said, "We will demand a parliamentary hearing by the bipartisan Lantos Human Rights Commission.

The purpose of this hearing will be to pass a resolution in the US Parliament to give a warning to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government that they should not accept calls related to genocide. Provocation, which is a crime in itself, has to be stopped." Also Read - India's Covid Vaccination Drive Complete Its One Year Today, Over 156 Crore Vaccine Given So Far Talking on the issue of hate speeches, he said that genocide is not an event but a process.

The Lantos Human Rights Commission is a parliamentary human rights caucus dedicated to the defense of universal human rights declared by the United Nations. Stanton has also told that the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, which has been seeking to mark India as a 'country of particular concern' for the past two years, may also hear the issue./ hwnews

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