London Gathering Defends Vision of Radical Islam 
By
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/jane_perlez/in
dex.html?inline=nyt-per> JANE PERLEZ
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/06/world/europe/06hizb.html?ref=world
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/06/world/europe/06hizb.html?ref=world&pagewa
nted=print> &pagewanted=print

LONDON, Aug. 4 - An international radical Islamic party that has been the
focus of increasing concern in Britain launched a frontal attack on its
critics at a carefully stage-managed conference in London this weekend that
attracted several thousand relatively well-heeled Muslims. 

"They say, 'You preach hate,' " said the party's chairman, Abdul Wahid, a
doctor in Harrow, England, to an appreciative audience segregated into his
and hers sections. "I preach a hatred of the lies of people in this country
that send soldiers to Iraq. I preach a hatred of torture." 

The party, Hizb ut-Tahrir, calls for the return of the caliphate in Muslim
countries, the end of Israel and the withdrawal of all Western interests in
the Middle East. In the aftermath of the botched terrorist attacks in London
and Glasgow, there were renewed calls in Parliament for barring the group,
on the ground that though it officially advocates change by peaceful means,
its pronouncements can encourage Muslims to turn toward terrorism.

The conference was dedicated to the return of the Khilafah, or caliphate,
the organization of Muslim power that held sway for centuries after the
death of the Prophet Muhammad. 

Titled Khilafah: The Need and the Method, it was held at the Alexandra
Palace, a 19th-century entertainment complex in grand gardens in northern
London, and drew a largely professional audience - IT managers, bankers,
teachers. For hours, speakers assailed the British government for linking
the group to terrorism, and for too often treating Muslims as terrorism
suspects, and drummed at the theme of the need for Muslim rule. 

"There is no Islam as a way of life without a Khilafah," said Kamal
Abuzahra, an Islamic academic of Bangladeshi origin, earning a roar of
approval and calls of "Allahu Akbar." 

Hizb ut-Tahrir, founded in the early 1950s by a
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/palestinians
/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> Palestinian judge dissatisfied with the
Muslim Brotherhood, has existed in Britain for a number of years and remains
legal in other Western countries, including the United States. But it is
banned in a number of Muslim countries, particularly those - including
Egypt, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia - that feel vulnerable to its calls for the
overthrow of their governments.

The group was banned by the German Interior Ministry in 2003 for "spreading
hate and violence," under a chapter in Germany's Constitution that is often
used to clamp down on anti-Semitism. Hizb ut-Tahrir is appealing the ban. 

In Britain, the group's popularity has waxed and waned, enjoying
considerable strength in the mid-1990s when members recall it attracted a
crowd of many thousands to a meeting at Wembley Stadium.

A strictly run cell-based organization, the party does not announce
membership numbers. It remains potent on British university campuses,
frequently fields speakers on television talk shows and runs a Web site that
falls short of running into problems with British law. 

Some analysts describe the group as "soft jihadists." Others contend that it
veers beyond that. "The only difference between Islamists from Hizb
ut-Tahrir and jihadists is that the former are waiting for their state and
caliph before they commence jihad, while the latter believes the time for
jihad is now," said Ed Husain, a former member of Hizb ut-Tahrir who has
written against the group in a recent book, "The Islamist."

 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/tony_blair/ind
ex.html?inline=nyt-per> Tony Blair, when he was still prime minister last
year, was urged by the Pakistani president, Gen.
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/pervez_musharr
af/index.html?inline=nyt-per> Pervez Musharraf, to ban the group on the
grounds that it "brainwashes people, and that leads to violent acts," a
senior Pakistani official said. Pakistani officials sent a similar message
to the British Foreign Office last month.

During Prime Minister
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/gordon_brown/i
ndex.html?inline=nyt-per> Gordon Brown's first question time last month, the
leader of the Conservative Party, David Cameron, asked Mr. Brown, the new
Labor leader, why Hizb ut-Tahrir had not been banned.

Mr. Cameron said the group was "poisoning the minds of young people and has
said that Jews should be killed wherever they are found." 

Mr. Brown replied that he had been in office only a short while and would
look into it. But John Reid, a former home secretary, jumped in, saying
there was not sufficient evidence under British law to ban the group.

During a lunch break in the sunny courtyard of the palace, people at the
conference told of the appeal of the ideology of a caliphate. 

"If you look at the political structure in the Muslim world, it's a police
state," said Mohammed Baig, 28, a second-generation British Indian who is an
asset manager specializing in corporate governance and has been a Tahrir
party member for seven years. "You have the public opinion underground, and
then staged public opinion in the media."

Most people in the Muslim world want Shariah, the code of Islamic law based
on the Koran, he said. 

"Our feeling is: what gives Western governments the right to impose a set of
values on a people who don't believe in them?" he said, referring to the
United States and Britain pushing for democratic values in the Middle East. 

Asked about Hizb ut-Tahrir as a conveyor belt to terrorism, Mr. Baig said:
"I'm not going to say Hizb ut-Tahir has been a perfect organization for 20
years. There are people who have come and gone in the organization. An
atmosphere was created in the youth in the mid-90s. Mistakes were made."

Some of the most ardent adherents to the party's ideas about a caliphate
were expressed by women. 

Rubina Ahmed, 33, a mother of four who came on a charter bus from
Manchester, said, "It's the in-depthness of the caliphate that I like." Hizb
ut-Tahrir "doesn't compromise on the values of Islam, and it's not afraid to
speak out for what it wants," she said. 

Why did Hizb ut-Tahir not work for the goal of the caliphate in Britain,
asked someone in the audience during a question-and-answer session. 

"We focus our work where we can get the quickest results," said Mr.
Abuzahra, the academic.


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