Evidence of extremism in mosques 'fabricated'

Martin Hodgson
Thursday December 13, 2007
The Guardian 


A rightwing thinktank which claimed to have uncovered extremist literature on 
sale at dozens of British mosques was last night accused of basing a report on 
fabricated evidence.
The report by Policy Exchange alleged that books condoning violent jihad and 
encouraging hatred of Christians, Jews and gays were being sold in a quarter of 
the 100 mosques visited.

But BBC2's Newsnight said examination of receipts provided by the researchers 
to verify their purchases showed some had been written by the same person - 
even though they purported to come from different mosques.


Several receipts also misspelled the names or addresses of the mosques where 
the books were supposedly sold.
The report, the Hijacking of British Islam, was based on the work of four teams 
of two researchers each who visited 100 mosques. They claimed to have found the 
controversial material in bookshops attached to 25 mosques, including one at 
Regent's Park, London, and others in Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Oxford 
and High Wycombe.

Published on the eve of a state visit by Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, the 
report prompted front page news stories. Tory leader David Cameron pledged to 
raise the revelations with King Abdullah, because much of the literature was 
said to have been sourced from Saudi Arabia.

According to the report, one book, which said that there can be "no 
brotherhood" between Muslims and non-Muslims, was bought at the Leyton mosque 
in east London.

But the address on a receipt provided by the researchers was found to be that 
of an unrelated bookshop next door.

A spokesman for the mosque, Dr Usama Hasan, said: "It has nothing to do with 
us. It is totally inaccurate and misleading information. It is completely 
false. In fact, we are considering taking legal action over this because it has 
the potential to damage the good name of our mosque."

Inayat Bunglawala, assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of 
Britain, said: "Policy Exchange produced a report that was given a lot of 
publicity, and Newsnight deserve credit for exposing the incredibly shoddy and 
dubious methodology that Policy Exchange have resorted to. It would seem that 
Policy Exchange had already decided what they wanted to say about mosques and 
just went out to find or should I say invent the evidence to justify their 
prejudices."

Policy Exchange's research director, Dean Godson, insisted it stood by the 
report "100%". He said the thinktank had checked its evidence thoroughly and 
the allegations did not challenge the substance of the study - that such 
extremist literature was being widely sold.

"We are standing by our report and the Muslim researchers that helped compile 
it," he added.

The researchers were unavailable for comment because they were all on a 
religious retreat in Mauritania, Policy Exchange told Newsnight.

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