gay_bombay  

g_b Muslim fanatics who called for execution of gays face up to seven years in jail

asfan
Sat, 21 Jan 2012 02:36:01 -0800

MAILONLINE
Saturday, Jan 21 2012 6AM  
 
Muslim fanatics who called for execution of gays face up to seven years in jail
By Katherine Faulkner


Muslim extremists who handed out leaflets calling for homosexuals to be hanged, 
stoned and burned to death were facing up to seven years in prison last night.
 

The group handed out the material in the street as well as posting it through 
letterboxes in a hate-filled campaign calling for the execution of gay people 
who they claimed were at the root of society’s problems.
Ihjaz Ali, Kabir Ahmed and Razwan Javed are the first to be prosecuted under 
new laws against inciting hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation.

 

Yesterday as they were found guilty at Derby Crown Court, residents spoke of 
how the three fundamentalists wanted to transform their small area of Derby 
into a ‘medieval state’ under Sharia law.

Anyone who dared to question their extreme agenda was branded an ‘M15 agent’ or 
a ‘sell-out,’ they said.


Last night it emerged that:  
Muslim fanatic and hate preacher Anjem Choudary was secretly invited by the 
group’s ringleader, Ihjaz Ali, for a series of meetings in Derby;
The group had links with the extremist organisation Al-Muhajiroun, which is 
banned under UK anti-terror laws; 
Moderate Muslim leaders who spoke out against the group’s activities were 
targeted in a hate campaign in which their faces were printed on ‘wanted’ 
posters; 
Police had to be called during local elections because the group’ s supporters 
were standing guard at polling stations, ordering Muslims not to vote. 

 
During the trial, the court heard how the group’s activities intimidated 
residents and left gay people frightened to walk on the streets. 
The first, entitled ‘Death penalty?’ proclaimed that ‘Allah permits the 
destruction’ of gay people and that ‘the only question is how it should be 
carried out’. 
The second, entitled ‘Turn or Burn’, featured a burning figure in a blazing 
lake of fire and warned that the decriminalisation of homosexuality was ‘the 
root of all problems’. 
A third, entitled ‘GAY - God Abhors You’, warned of ‘severe punishment’ for 
homosexuals.
A fourth leaflet linked to the group, which was never distributed, described 
homosexuality as a ‘vile, ugly, cancerous disease’. It referred to ‘queer 
sinners’ and ‘faggots’ and posed the question ‘Gay Today, Paedophile Tomorrow?’ 

 
Ali, 42, Ahmed, 28, and Javed, also 28, all of Normanton, Derby were found 
guilty of distributing threatening written material intending to stir up hatred 
on the grounds of sexual orientation. They will be sentenced next month.
Two others who distributed the leaflets, Mehboob Hussein, 44, and Umar Javed, 
38, also of Normanton, were cleared of inciting hatred.
The offence was created by an amendment to the Criminal Justice and Immigration 
Act, brought in March 2010.
Stirring up hatred against homosexuals now carries the same penalties as 
inciting hatred based on race or religion. 

During the trial, gay residents told of the impact the leaflet campaign had on 
their lives. They gave their evidence from behind screens because they said 
they were terrified of the group knowing they were gay.

 
Ben Summerskill, head of the gay rights group Stonewall, said extreme anti-gay 
propaganda had become a choice tactic for preachers of hate, who knew that 
other extremist messages – relating to terror or religious hate – would land 
them in prison.
‘It’s clear that one form of extremism fosters another,’ he said. ‘It’s no 
surprise there’s a link between violent and extreme homophobia and religious 
extremism.’ 
 
At his trial, ringleader Ihjaz Ali insisted he was just a ‘hard-working, family 
man’ with traditional Muslim views.
But yesterday a video emerged which shows Ali at a meeting with notorious hate 
preacher Anjem Choudary. Ali booked the room in a local community centre on 
‘several occasions’ for secret meetings with the notorious fanatic.
Choudary has frequently praised the terrorists who carried out the 9/11 attacks 
and called for all gays to be stoned to death.
Ali, a taxi driver, had told community centre staff he wanted the room for an 
‘Islamic discussion group’. But police were called in when they realised 
Choudary was attending the meetings. 

On the video, taken in 2009, bearded Ali can be seen remonstrating with police 
officers as they order Choudary out, telling him he is ‘not welcome’ in Derby.

Holding a letter the police have handed him, Ali can be heard saying: ‘You say 
to me according to this letter…(that I)… support violent extremism.’ The 
policeman replies: ‘Of course you do.’ 
Labour councillor Fareed Hussain said the footage of Ali with Choudary was ‘not 
surprising.’ 

He said that Ali was ‘openly associated’ with Al-Muhajiroun – a group headed by 
Choudary and banned under British law because of its suspected links to 
international terrorism.
 

Ali, he said, had ‘openly distributed literature’ in the name of Al-Muhajiroun 
from a stand on the Normanton high street. And he would ‘subject younger 
Muslims to pressure’ to take part in his fundamentalist campaigns.
‘I think it is extremely likely Ali and his associates are still linked to 
Al-Muhajiroun,’ the councillor added. ‘I don’t for a minute believe these five 
who distributed the leaflets were operating in isolation.’ 
 

One resident, who did not want to be named for fear of being targeted, said the 
extremist group led by Ali ‘wanted to turn the clock back to a medieval state’ 
under Islamic law.
 

Another, Oweyss Lal, 18, a sales consultant, said: ‘They target  teenagers who 
are not very educated. Anyone who speaks out against them is labelled an MI5 
agent or a sell-out.’ 
 

Mr Hussein said although they ‘did not represent a majority at  all,’ Ali and 
his accomplices were ‘very aggressive, vocal and intimidating’.
 

During local elections in 2006, a group of Muslim men gathered at the polling 
station in Normanton to intimidate voters. ‘They told people that voting was 
forbidden by Islam and any government is illegitimate unless it is an Islamic 
caliphate,’ he said. 
‘I had to call the police – they were scaring people.’ 
 

Mr Hussein said he was then singled out himself in a frightening poster 
campaign. In the same week the ‘death penalty’ leaflets were distributed, 
hundreds of ‘wanted’ posters appeared in Derby accusing Mr Hussein and other 
Muslim community leaders of ‘selling out’ to a western agenda.
 

 ‘The alleged crime was encouraging Muslims to be part of wider society,’ he 
said. ‘I was shocked – the posters were very intimidating.’
 

 One gay resident summed up the atmosphere in the area.
‘It used to be lovely round here,’ he said. 
‘Now, because of these people, you don’t feel safe. I don’t have any problems 
with Muslims. But these lot need to realise we live in England, not some 
Islamic state.’



  • g_b Muslim fanatics who called for execution of gays face up to seven years in jail asfan