Staff

Staff

KARACHI, Pakistan 

India is pursuing an agenda to destabilize Pakistan and is behind a fresh wave of terror attacks in the country, top Pakistani officials said on Saturday.

New Delhi continues to sponsor terrorism on Pakistani soil, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said at a news conference in the capital Islamabad, presenting a dossier with what he said was “irrefutable evidence.”

Qureshi said Pakistan has “concrete” proof of India providing financial and material help to multiple terrorist organizations, including UN-designated groups such as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the Balochistan Liberation Army, and Jamaat-ul-Ahrar.

He said the dossier will be submitted to the UN, Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC), and five permanent members of the UN Security Council.

“Pakistan has shared its concerns with major international partners before. We are now presenting irrefutable evidence to the world of the Indian state’s direct sponsorship of terrorism inside Pakistan that has resulted in the deaths of innocent Pakistanis,” he said at the news conference along with army spokesperson Maj. Gen. Babar Iftikhar.

“We expect the international community to play its role for peace and stability in the region by compelling India to immediately halt its state sponsorship of terrorism inside Pakistan.”

The development coincides with a fresh round of clashes between the two militaries along the Line of Control (LOC) -- a de facto border that divides the disputed Jammu and Kashmir region between the two nuclear neighbors -- which killed 16 people, including four Indian soldiers.

Accusing New Delhi of “state terrorism” in the disputed Jammu and Kashmir region and resorting to shelling along the LOC, Qureshi said the international community can no longer turn a blind eye to the “rogue behavior by a state which refuses to adhere to International laws and conventions.”

“Let me be clear that India is a state sponsor of terrorism that is consistently exhibiting rogue behavior,” he said.

“If the world does not take the Indian agenda to destabilize and undermine Pakistan in the region seriously, then I am afraid peace and stability in a nuclear South Asia does not seem to be their priority.”

Qureshi warned that Islamabad reserves the right to respond to India’s “provocations.”

“We know how to defend ourselves. India’s efforts to foment terrorism inside Pakistan will not be allowed to undermine Pakistan’s stability in any way,” he asserted.

“Whether they acknowledge it or not, all major powers know that India is a threat to the entire region. They must act to stop India from its continuous sponsorship of terrorism against Pakistan.”

There has been no comment yet from India on these latest allegations by Pakistan./aa

KARACHI, Pakistan 

India must face justice for killing thousands of innocent Pakistanis in terrorist attacks it has sponsored, Pakistan’s prime minister said on Saturday.

Imran Khan’s remarks came hours after Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and army spokesman Maj. Gen. Babar Iftikhar’s news conference in the capital Islamabad where they presented a dossier with “irrefutable evidence” of New Delhi’s sponsorship of terrorism.

“We have provided irrefutable evidence of India’s state sponsored terrorism inside Pak[istan],” he said in a series of Twitter posts.

“Details of financial & material support & Indian state's direct involvement in terrorism have been given to the world which, in the face of this evidence, cannot remain indifferent or silent.”

He said the international community must “force India to end its terrorism & bring to justice those responsible for killing thousands of innocent people in Pakistan.”

The latest accusations from Islamabad coincide with fresh clashes along the Line of Control (LOC) -- a de facto border that divides the disputed Jammu and Kashmir region between the two nuclear neighbors -- which killed 16 people, including four Indian soldiers.

Hailing the country’s security agencies for their fight against terrorism, Khan said they will continue to “give their all to protect our people.”

“Let there be no doubt anywhere that we know how to defend our country and will continue to do so with our combined national resolve,” he said.

Pakistan and India have a long history of disputes and the Himalayan region of Kashmir has been one of the most prominent issues.

The nuclear neighbors have fought three full-scale wars since partition in 1947, with two of them -- 1948 and 1965 -- over Kashmir./aa

KARACHI, Pakistan

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday wished the country’s Hindu community over Diwali, one of their two key festivals.

Hindus across the world are celebrating five-day Diwali, or the festival of lights, to mark the "victory of good over evil and light over darkness" on Saturday.

“Wishing all our Hindu citizens a happy Diwali,” Khan said in a Twitter post.

Hindus, the largest minority in Pakistan, make up 4% of the country’s more than 200 million population./aa

WASHINGTON (Yahoo News) — In his first remarks on the coronavirus since losing last week’s presidential election, President Trump said that millions of Americans will be vaccinated in the coming weeks, welcome news for a nation reeling from record infection rates and prospects of new lockdowns.

“The delivery will be very rapid,” Trump promised. “We’re ready to go. The vaccine will be distributed to frontline workers, the elderly and high-risk Americans immediately — matter of weeks,” Trump said, in what was billed as an update on Operation Warp Speed, the $18 billion public-private partnership to develop and distribute a coronavirus vaccine to the American public.

“Millions of doses will soon be going out the door. They’re all ready,” Trump said of the vaccine doses awaiting deployment. “Waiting for that final approval.”

Moncef Slaoui, one of the two leaders of Operation Warp Speed, elaborated on that promise. “We plan to have enough vaccine doses available for use in the U.S. population to immunize about 20 million individuals in the month of December, and another 25 to 30 million per month on an ongoing basis from there on,” Slaoui said. That number could increase come February or March, he added, as other vaccines become available.

In all, six American companies are in the midst of vaccine development. Four vaccine candidates, including those being developed by pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and Moderna, are in the final stages of clinical testing.

“The American people can be comforted — with all the news this week — that help is on the way,” Vice President Mike Pence said in his own brief time at the Rose Garden podium. Pence, the nominal head of the White House coronavirus task force, has not conducted a public briefing on the subject in months.

The press conference was a break from days of public silence and reported internal turmoil at the White House. Since the election, Trump has been fixated on his political future, tweeting out baseless conspiracy theories about voter fraud, even as he and his top advisers mull a post-presidential future.

The virus had become something of an afterthought for the president at precisely the moment the pandemic seemed to be entering a perilous new phase.

President Trump in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Friday. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

In his own brief statement, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said that there was “light at the end of the tunnel,” a phrase with unfortunate echoes of predictions of American victory in the Vietnam War.

Although Trump has frequently exaggerated or misrepresented aspects of his administration’s pandemic response, some optimism is warranted. Pfizer announced earlier this week that its vaccine was 90 percent effective. Moderna is also expected to publish results for its own vaccine trials within the next several weeks.

“As soon as April, the vaccine will be available to the entire general population,” Trump also said. Broad public distribution of the vaccine will almost certainly prove a vast logistical challenge, which could be complicated by Trump’s refusal to begin the transition of power to the president-elect, former Vice President Joe Biden.

Speaking earlier this week, leading immunologist Dr. Anthony Fauci, who enjoys widespread trust from the American public, departed from his recent round of grim pronouncements to offer a similar note of hope. “The vaccine is on its way, folks, so hang in there, hang tough,” Fauci told an audience gathered in his native Brooklyn. “We’re going to get over this together.”

Trump resorted to a more divisive tone, resuming a long-standing feud with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, who had expressed concerns that the approval process was rushed and motivated by politics. Cuomo has assembled a team of scientists that he says will review the vaccine.

In his Rose Garden address on Friday evening, Trump singled out New York state, the epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic throughout the spring. “We won’t be delivering it to New York until we have authorization,” the president said sourly. “We can’t be delivering it to a state that won’t be giving it to its people immediately.”

Trump noted that Cuomo had been the subject of “some very bad editorials.”

Despite the toll the coronavirus is now taking across the country, from densely populated cities to rural areas, Trump said he opposed new measures to lock down businesses, schools and public venues.

“Ideally, we won’t go to a lockdown,” Trump said. “This administration will not be going to a lockdown.” He then started to say that a new administration could have different plans before seeming to realize that even the slightest acknowledgment of a Biden presidency would undermine his conspiratorial message of electoral fraud.

“Hopefully the — the uh — whatever happens in the future, who knows which administration it will be, I guess time will tell,” he added, speaking apparently of both politics and the pandemic. He left the press conference without taking questions.

It was 2 a.m. on a Tuesday when the raid began at the Eyewitness War Museum in the town of Beek, the Netherlands.

First, a group of thieves teased open the museum’s front gate.

“You can see it on our cameras,” said Wim Seelen, the museum’s director.

But then, they disappeared.

An hour later, the burglars returned in several estate cars. In a scene reminiscent of a heist movie, they spread out tires across the highway that runs past the museum to create a roadblock and parked a fake police car beside it, so it looked official.

Over the next five minutes, the group — maybe 12 people in total, Seelen said — battered down the museum’s front door, broke display cabinets and took what they’d come for: nine mannequins wearing rare Nazi uniforms. The outfits included one worn by Hitler’s personal chef and another by a high-ranking member of the SS.

The robbers took other items of World War II memorabilia, Seelen said, with the haul worth about $1.5 million in total.

“It was done with military precision,” he added.

The museum’s alarms went off, but the police — held up by the roadblock — arrived too late to catch anyone.

“Of course, I’m terrified it will happen again,” Seelen said.

The Aug. 4 raid in Beek was only the most dramatic in a string of recent robberies from World War II museums in Europe, and the burglaries are spreading panic among similar institutions.

Since March, four museums in the Netherlands and Denmark have been broken into, and memorabilia, including Nazi uniforms, has been stolen. The most recent raid took place Nov. 3, when robbers broke through a window at the German Museum North Schleswig, in southern Denmark, and made off with three mannequins in Nazi outfits.

Administrators from all four of the burglarized institutions said they believed the thieves were acting on the orders of collectors looking to get their hands on rare Nazi memorabilia. But they were uncertain whether the robberies were carried out by the same group or were simply part of a worrying trend.

Officers of the Dutch and Danish police said in telephone interviews that they had no suspects in any of the robberies but were looking for patterns.

Richard Bronswijk of the Dutch police’s art crime unit said his team had two theories: that wealthy collectors in Russia or Eastern Europe had ordered the robberies, or that they were undertaken by supporters of the far right. The second theory was less likely, he added, “as those guys don’t have much money and like to buy replicas.”

The raid at the Eyewitness War Museum was incredibly professional, he said.

“They were really like ‘Ocean’s Twelve,’ ” he added, referring to the Hollywood heist movie.

The Netherlands and Denmark, which were both occupied by Nazi Germany during World War II, have numerous small, private and state-funded museums devoted to the history of that conflict. Many have glass display cases filled with memorabilia including weapons, and dioramas depicting scenes from the war, with mannequins in original uniforms. There are around 100 in the Netherlands alone, Seelen estimated.

Many Dutch museums have taken rare items off display or improved their security systems in response to the recent robberies. The Arnhem War Museum has installed anti-tank barriers at its entrance, “so people can’t come with a big truck,” said Marina Moens, one of its owners.

Concern is growing in Denmark, too.

“I’m sure every museum’s taking precautions,” said Henrik Skov Kristensen, director of the Froslev Camp Museum. “But if someone’s determined to do something like this, they will.”

Kristensen’s museum, set in a former prison camp in Denmark, was robbed in March. The burglars also took SS uniforms. After finding no leads, Danish police closed the investigation in April, he said.

Giel van Wassenhove, a Belgian dealer in military memorabilia, said the value of Nazi items had been rising for years.

“The stuff that’s being stolen is all very desirable, and the prices are going crazy,” he said. “Everyone knows if it’s got a Nazi emblem on it, its price is high.”

An SS uniform could fetch anywhere from $3,500 to $35,000, he said.

In the two Dutch robberies, thieves stole a special rifle, the “FG 42,” which was used by Nazi paratroopers, van Wassenhove said. A decade ago, he said, that gun was worth about $60,000; today, it is worth more than $175,000.

But van Wassenhove played down suggestions that a boom in far-right collectors was driving the soaring prices. Most buyers were investors simply chasing a profit, he said.

Many museums might not realize the value of objects in their collections, van Wassenhove added.

Those that do are not taking any chances: Moens of the Arnhem War Museum said that, in addition to installing anti-tank barriers, the museum had taken all its Nazi uniforms off display. In October, the War Museum Overloon returned two rare books it had borrowed from an Amsterdam institute, including a “Book of the Dead” listing 1,500 victims of the Holocaust at Auschwitz. Janneke Kennis, a spokeswoman for the museum, said the museum feared the books could be targeted by thieves.

Seelen said the raid at the Eyewitness Museum had been so devastating that, for weeks afterward, he considered closing down. He said he knew he would never see the items again.

But World War II museums are not just homes for memorabilia, he said: They play an important educational role.

“The Second World War was a period of so much suffering that we have to tell the story of it, to make sure it never ever happens again,” he said. “I’m not going to quit telling that story.”

The New York Times.

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A white supremacist who told an undercover FBI agent about his plans to firebomb a synagogue or attack a Las Vegas bar catering to LGBTQ customers was sentenced Friday to two years in prison.

Conor Climo, 24, apologized before U.S. District Judge James Mahan sentenced him to prison followed by six months of home confinement with electronic monitoring. Prosecutors recommended a 30-month prison sentence.

“I was truly wrong for all of this," Climo said. “I even have come to really regret everything, everything that I was involved with.”

The judge gave Climo credit for the jail time he already has served since his August 2019 arrest and agreed to recommend that he serves his prison time in Louisiana, near grandparents whom he plans to live with after his release.

“I'm going to take you at your word,” Mahan told Climo. “I think you have seen the error of your ways and you want to reform.”

Defense attorney Paul Riddle said his client is grateful that FBI agents arrested him when they did because he knows that he was on a “very dark path."

“But he's not on that path anymore, and he's the not same person that was arrested,” Riddle said.

The FBI said it began investigating Climo in April 2019 after learning of his encrypted internet chats with members of Feuerkrieg Division, an international offshoot of a U.S.-based neo-Nazi group called Atomwaffen Division. Climo told FBI agents that he joined Feuerkrieg Division but left because he “became bored with the group and their inaction,” according to a court filing.

Climo, in pleading guilty to a firearm charge, acknowledged that he discussed attacking a synagogue or other targets during his online communications with an undercover FBI agent and an informant. Agents who searched Climo's Las Vegas home found bomb components and two rifles.

Climo was “not just talking about what he believes and intends to do, but rather is planning, and has engaged in actions,” a federal magistrate judge wrote after Climo's arrest.

Atomwaffen has been linked to several killings, including the May 2017 shooting deaths of two men at an apartment in Tampa, Florida. Atomwaffen co-founder Devon Arthurs, who was charged with killing two of his roommates in the apartment, told police they were group members and that he killed them to thwart a terrorist attack.

Federal authorities have arrested several men linked to white supremacist groups promoting “accelerationism,” a fringe philosophy espousing mass violence to fuel society’s collapse. Members of a neo-Nazi group called The Base were arrested in January ahead of a gun rights rally in Virginia. Several Atomwaffen members were charged in February with conspiring to harass journalists, church congregations and a former Cabinet official.

Climo pleaded guilty in February to illegal possession of an unregistered firearm, a charge that carries a maximum prison sentence of 10 years.

During an FBI interview, Climo described his white supremacist ideology and expressed his hatred of Jews, African Americans and gay people, authorities said.

Climo told an FBI informant that he tried but failed to recruit a homeless person to conduct surveillance on a synagogue in October 2017, according to a court filing.

“The defendant had very specific plans about attacking one specific synagogue near his house,” U.S. Magistrate Judge Nancy Koppe wrote in an order last year. “The defendant spoke of wanting to light an incendiary device and having others join him to shoot people as they came out of the synagogue.”

Investigators said Climo compiled a journal with sketches of gunmen attacking a LGBTQ bar in a downtown tourist corridor. His list of potential targets also included a fast food restaurant and a Las Vegas office for the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish civil rights group, authorities said.

The ADL describes Feuerkrieg Division as a group that has advocated for a race war and promoted some of the most extreme views of the white supremacist movement. Formed in 2018, it had roughly 30 members who conducted most of their activities online, the ADL said.

Another man linked to Feuerkrieg Division, former soldier Jarrett William Smith, was sentenced in August to 2 1/2 years in prison for distributing information about building a bomb and making napalm to an undercover FBI agent while he was stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas.

Climo, a former security guard, came to the attention of authorities in September 2016 when he was interviewed by a local television news crew as he wore military-style battle gear and patrolled his neighborhood carrying an assault rifle, survival knife and extended-capacity ammunition magazines. Police said at the time he was not arrested because Nevada does not prohibit openly carrying firearms.

KIEV, Ukraine/ANKARA 

Uprooted from their homeland 76 years ago by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, Ahiska Turks still suffer the pain of exile and longing for their homeland on the anniversary of their deportation.

Meskheti, a region now located on Georgia's border with Turkey, was left to Russia after a war between the Ottoman Empire and Tsarist Russia in 1828-1829.

After World War I, the region, which was now within the Soviet Union, was given to the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic. This would be the beginning of suffering for Ahiska Turks, like many other Turkish and Muslim communities in the USSR.

After Stalin signed an exile order for the Ahiska Turks despite their service in the Soviet army fighting against Nazi Germany in World War II, over 86,000 Ahiska Turks, also known as Meskhetian Turks, were expelled from their homeland to distant lands within the Soviet Union.

Thousands of Turks and Muslims living in the Meskhetia region were put on wagons just hours after being informed of their forced migration, not even being allowed to pack their belongings.

During their deportation, which lasted more than a month, nearly 17,000 Ahiska Turks lost their lives due to hunger, cold and illness.

Those who survived were forced to remain in various regions in Central Asia, where a further 30,000 died due to hunger and disease.

The Soviet administration forced Ahiska Turks to work in the most difficult jobs regardless of their age and gender and barred them from leaving their areas they were made to live, punishing violators by exiling them and their families to Siberia for 25 years.

One of the survivors of Ahiska Turks' exile, Sukri Anvarov, 87, told Anadolu Agency that he was 12 years old when they were forced to leave their homeland.

Forced aboard windowless wagons used in coal transportation, Anvarov and his fellow Ahiska Turks "traveled by train for 19-20 days in those conditions and arrived in Uzbekistan. They made us wait in a bazaar for three days and then sent us them to the villages.”

He said the soldiers came knocking at their doors at dawn, rifles in hand, and forced everyone out their houses, breaking their windows.

Recounting that they lived in Uzbekistan with no problems until 1990, Anvarov said they had to leave after a series of incidents in the Fergana Valley, adding: "The Uzbeks threw us out too, though we believe in the same religion."

He emphasized that the Ahiska Turks once again found themselves in disarray and had to migrate to different regions including Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Ukraine.

"We came to Ukraine, Nikolayev city. We're happy to be living in Ukraine, but our home is Turkey, we want to live there one day,” he added.

Stalin's ethnic cleansing

Under Stalin, Soviet authorities claimed that the Ahiska Turks had collaborated with Nazi Germany in World War II, whereas they had actually been on the frontlines with the Russians.

With the dissolution of the USSR, it was understood that these charges were false and that the real aim was different.

According to Soviet records, the exile of the Crimean and Meskhetian Turks was meant to ethnically cleanse the Black Sea regions of Turks.

Hope to return home

Today, approximately 20,000 people live in the Meskhetia region, though a very small number of these are Turkish.

The majority of Ahiska Turks still live in the places where they were exiled or in the countries they later migrated to.

According to the reports of international organizations and other sources, 550,000-600,000 Ahıska Turks currently live far from their homeland.

Some have made their way to Turkey, while others are in Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Ukraine and the US.

Their return to their homeland, which came to the agenda decades ago with the dissolution of the USSR, has not been resolved since.

For its part, Georgia has so far failed to take concrete steps despite the law it enacted in 2007 on the return of Ahiska Turks./aa

ANKARA 

Amnesty International on Saturday accused the French government of not being the "champion of free speech that it likes to think it is," criticizing recent rhetoric by the government as "shameful hypocrisy."

"The French government's rhetoric on free speech is not enough to conceal its own shameless hypocrisy," said Marco Pirolini, a researcher in the rights group, adding that freedom of expression "means nothing unless it applies to everyone."

He accused French President Emmanuel Macron and his government of doubling down on a "smear campaign" against French Muslims over the murder of Samuel Paty, a French teacher who was brutally murdered in mid-October.

"[They] launched their own attack on freedom of expression," said Pirolini, citing recent incidents such as the hours-long questioning by French police of four 10-year-old children on suspicion of "apology of terrorism."

He also referred to a court ruling on two men for "contempt" after they burned an effigy depicting Macron during a peaceful protest, as well as a bill being discussed in parliament that would criminalize the use of images of law enforcement officials on social media.

"It is hard to square this with the French authorities' vigorous defense of the right to depict the Prophet Mohammed in cartoons."

He stressed that Muslims' freedom of expression and religion usually received scant attention in France under the guise of Republican universalism, underlining that in the name of secularism, Muslims in France were banned from wear religious symbols or dress in schools and public sector jobs.

"France's record on freedom of expression in other areas is just as bleak. Thousands of people are convicted every year for 'contempt of public officials', a vaguely defined criminal offence that law enforcement and judicial authorities have applied in massive numbers to silence peaceful dissent,” Pirolini added.

"In June this year, the European Court of Human Rights found that the convictions of 11 activists in France for campaigning for a boycott of Israeli products violated their free speech," he said.

Pirolini criticized recent moves by authorities to dissolve organizations and close mosques on the basis of the "ambiguous concept of 'radicalization.'” He also accused the government of conflating "radicalization" with the actions of devout Muslims.

"The government's free speech campaign should not be used for covering up the measures that put people at risk of human rights abuses including torture," he said.

Last month, Macron described Islam as "a religion in crisis" and announced plans for tougher laws to tackle "Islamist separatism" in France.

Tensions further escalated after middle school teacher Paty was murdered and beheaded on Oct. 16 in a Paris suburb in retaliation for showing his students blasphemous cartoons of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad during a class on freedom of expression.

Insulting cartoons by the French weekly magazine Charlie Hebdo were also projected on buildings in some French cities.

Macron defended the cartoons, saying France would "not give up our cartoons," sparking outrage across the Muslim world./aa

LONDON

Over one-third of Muslim members and supporters of British Labour Party have witnessed Islamophobia within the party, according to a new investigation.

A report by the Labour Muslim Network (LMN) said 44% of those who were surveyed believe that the party does not take Islamophobia seriously and almost half of them lost confidence in its complaints structure.

The investigation, reported by ITV News, says 59% of Muslims do not feel well represented by the party and 37% said they witnessed Islamophobia directly within the party.

The ITV news report included examples reported by the investigation.

Ali Milani, who stood as a candidate in Uxbridge and South Ruislip in the last general election, claimed that a fellow party member told him Muslims could not be MPs because of "their propensity to violence" and asked if he was a terrorist.

"It hurts to feel like I experienced that sort of abuse from a party member and it not only took a year for them to get back to me, but the complaint was lost," Milani said.

Afzal Khan, MP for Manchester Gorton and the parliamentary chair of the Labour Muslim Network, said Islamophobia within the Labour party has gone "unnoticed" and "deserved immediate attention."

"Whilst the Labour Party has enjoyed the overwhelming support of the Muslim community for decades, we cannot take their support for granted," Khan wrote.

"The Labour Party must commit to a zero tolerance of Islamophobia and rebuild confidence with its Muslim members."

Call for action

Labour MP Apsana Begum said the party "has been in denial" about Islamophobia.

Speaking to the ITV News, she said: "It’s quite regular to be asked questions and to constantly be asked to reaffirm my commitment towards British society as if in some way my identity and politics are not compatible."

The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) said the report was "shocking" and urged the party to act immediately.

A council spokesperson said: "Islamophobia is prevalent across British society but when it is within political parties who are our representatives and who decide on policy, it is all the more dangerous.

"That is why this new report is deeply concerning. It shows shocking levels of Islamophobia within the Labour Party, and a distrust amongst Muslim members of the leadership's willingness to take this type of racism seriously.

"Now that the problem has been clearly exposed, we hope to see the leadership demonstrating no tolerance for any form of racism by listening to the party's members, and acting immediately, decisively and effectively, starting by adopting the report's recommendations.

"We have seen what happens when a political party lets Islamophobia go unchecked. The Conservative Party’s problem with Islamophobia is deep-rooted across every part of the party as it has engaged in denial, dismissal and deceit. We urge the Labour Party to avoid making the same mistakes as the Conservative Party has made, and look at how racism should be tackled, so that it can more fully represent its members and supporters."

Growing Islamophobia

Responding to the report, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and deputy leader Angela Rayner said: "Islamophobia has no place in our party or society and we are committed to rooting it out.

"We look forward to working with LMN to implement their recommendations and will be meeting with them to discuss the next steps in tackling the scourge of Islamophobia."


The report said the "growing threat of Islamophobia in mainstream politics has caused significant concern in across Muslim communities in Britain."

"Since the 2016 EU referendum, we have seen a sharp rise in hate crime and -- in particular -- a rise in violent and non-violent Islamophobic attacks."

It said that the Home Office figures released in October 2020 showed that the highest number of recorded hate crime offenses committed in the UK were against Muslims.

It said: "Of the 6,822 religious hate crimes recorded by the police in 2019/20, over 50% were targeted towards Muslims."

"With this and the increasing normalisation of Islamophobia in the Conservative party, and a growing concern over its perceived penetration into the Labour Party, Muslims across the country find themselves in a precarious position."/aa

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