http://www.arabtimesonline.com/arabtimes/world/Viewdet.asp?
ID=5476&cat=a

People may be forced to pick sides in `holy war'; Wheat against 
chaff ... Muslims battle dark side 

BIRMINGHAM, England (AP): A packed mosque, an influential cleric and 
powerful denunciations against violence in the name of Islam: The 
scene was exactly what British authorities want to see. "We must 
save Islam from the dark forces of hate," shouted the preacher to 
more than 2,000 men and boys in the grand Gamkol Sharif mosque. But 
this new kind of jihad will test the faith like no other, warned 
Mufti Muhammad Gul Rehman Qadri, who heads Britain's largest Sunni 
Muslim coalition. This holy war is Muslim vs. Muslim. "Be strong," 
said Qadri, thumping his cane into the crimson carpet. He then read 
the first major fatwa, or religious edict, condemning suicide 
bombings and the July 7 attacks against the London Underground that 
killed at least 56 people.

The gathering last week is at the heart of a broad - and closely 
watched - British strategy that seeks to reach directly into Islam's 
angry fringe. Mainstream Muslim leaders are being pushed hard to 
lead the way. The idea is to rouse Islam's moderate majority, using 
its moral and spiritual clout to crush extremist ideology in one of 
the faith's most important outposts in western Europe, where some 
forecasts say the Muslim population could double to nearly 30 
million, or close to 8 per cent of the population, within the 
decade. At the same time, Muslim envoys and clerics are being drawn 
into uncomfortable watchdog roles - asked to assist authorities in 
ways much sharper and stronger than after the attacks in Spain last 
year or even in the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001.

And they must do it in the world's most diverse Muslim community: 
about 1.6 million strong with roots in every corner of the Islamic 
world. This week's developments can only ratchet up the pressure: 
Another attempt on Thursday by attackers to blow up three subway 
trains and a bus - an eerie if failed replay of the deadly July 7 
strikes - followed by the anti-terror shooting of a man in an 
underground station. The long-range hope of the Muslim policing 
effort is that anti-Western preachers and factions around Britain 
will eventually wither under internal pressure. Success in Britain, 
the theory goes, could spark an intellectual assault against Islamic 
radicalism around the world.

But it's a mission with many serious complications. Not the least of 
which: How to open debate and dialogue with radical groups that are 
being driven further underground by police measures. "Moderate 
Muslims have been given a giant task," said Ali Ansari, a professor 
of Islamic studies at St Andrew's University in Scotland. "The world 
is watching how they respond." On Tuesday, British Prime Minister 
Tony Blair met with top Muslim envoys and told them to "confront 
this evil ideology." "Take it on," Blair said, "and defeat it by the 
force of reason." Yet relying on such Western-style arguments is 
another weak point of the effort. The strains of Islam that see 
violence as a legitimate tool have deep roots with their own logic 
and perspectives - often developed as a rejection to what they 
consider flaws in modern Islam.

One of the most pervasive is an Egyptian-born movement called el-
Takfir wa el-Hirja, which has provided underpinnings for groups 
including al-Qaeda and professes to shun anyone perceived as 
against "pure" Islam or "corrupted" by Western ways. This would 
include clerics working alongside British officials. Also, radicals 
often draw strength in their distance from the mainstream, 
portraying themselves as the shepherds for struggling Muslims in 
Britain and champions for broader Muslim causes such as the 
Palestinian self-determination, opposition to the Iraqi war and 
battlefronts in Chechnya and Kashmir. Sheik Omar Bakri, a hardline 
cleric who has described suicide bombings as an acceptable weapon by 
Iraqi insurgents, claimed Britain is seeking to "divide and rule" 
Muslims. "So we're left with moderate Muslims preaching to moderate 
Muslims. That gets us nowhere," said Lord Nazir Ahmed, a Muslim 
member of Britain's House of Lords who has supported the deportation 
of extremist preachers. "We have to get in there and smash this 
violent ideology. It is a cult, not a part of real Islam. Words 
aren't enough." 

The gathering in Birmingham showed the limitations. Inside the 
mosque - which towers over a mostly Muslim district - Britain's 
largest Sunni Muslim coalition denounced radicals from all angles. 
Clerics called any violence a sin and terrorism "an ideology alien 
to Islam's core values." The fatwa went further: "The attacks in 
London have no Islamic justification, are totally condemned and we 
equally condemn those who have been behind the masterminding of 
these acts" - which claimed at least 56 lives and, like 9/11, has 
entered the British lexicon as 7/7.

A few blocks away, however, another kind of meeting was taking 
place. Four young men sat in an Islamic bookstore to finish hand-
drawn fliers to protest the "crimes against Muslims" - a list 
including the occupation of Iraq, Palestinian struggles and the 
perception of a permanent underclass status for Britain's Muslims. 
They titled the missives: "The two sides of 7/7." "No one can 
condone the attacks in London," said one of the men, who gave his 
name only as Munir. "But you also can't ignore the feelings of 
Muslims and the pain they sense. We have to look a lot deeper than 
just condemning violence." Some question if the moderate Muslim 
leadership in Britain is willing to go in that direction. It moves 
them toward some awkward choices - making distinctions between 
terrorism and what's considered legitimate Islamic struggles.

"It gets awfully messy when you try to rank violence," said Gholam 
Rabbani, who leads a mosque in Walthamstow, east of central 
London. "We can't say a suicide attack by Palestinians is 
acceptable, but one in London or Madrid are not. We have to say it's 
always wrong." But this is where radical Islam often finds its 
footing. London-based clerics such as Abu Hamza al-Masri quickly 
gained a wide following by praising attacks against Israel and US-
led forces in Iraq. Al-Masri, who is awaiting trial on charges of 
incitement to murder, has been linked to terror suspects, including 
Zacarias Moussaoui, the only person charged in the United States 
with crimes related to the Sept 11 attacks, and "shoe bomber" 
Richard Reid.

A reported associate of Al-Masri also is being sought in connection 
with the London blasts. At the request of British officials, 
authorities in Pakistan are searching for Haroon Rashid Aswat, who 
reportedly had been in close contact with the suicide bombers. 
Aswat, 31, is of Indian origin and his whereabouts are 
unknown. "Young people have drifted away (from the mainstream) 
either because they were banned to discuss controversial issues in 
the mosque or found nothing inspiring on offer there," said 
Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, a leading London-based Muslim activist.

A report last week by two respected British institutions - the Royal 
Institute of International Affairs and Economic and Social Research 
Council - concluded that the situation in Iraq had given "a boost to 
the al-Qaeda network's propaganda, recruitment and fund-raising" and 
provided a training ground for al-Qaeda-linked terrorists. On 
Tuesday, the group that claimed responsibility for the London 
bombings threatened to continue "a bloody war" on Denmark, Britain, 
Italy and other European countries unless their troops are removed 
from Iraq within a month. The authenticity of the statement by the 
Abu Hafs al Masri Brigades could not be verified. But the Blair 
government has repeatedly rejected the widely held opinion that Iraq 
played a role in the bombings. The stance was seen by some as 
another blow to the credibility of the moderate Muslim leaders 
working closely with authorities.

"They are not speaking the language of the people; the language of 
the streets, the language of the youth," said Hanif Malik, a Muslim 
community leader in Leeds - the northern city that was home to three 
of the four suicide bombers. "We're afraid they will miss a chance 
to reach the Muslims who are at the most risk of following the 
misguided call of violence." Even if moderate leaders' outreach 
efforts were more successful, they still might not be enough, said 
Peter Singer, who studies Western policy outreach to the Islamic 
world at the Brookings Institution in Washington. What's needed is a 
strategy similar to fighting an insurgency, which requires an 
overall shift in laws and attitudes aimed at choking off Islamic 
extremists.

"Britain has to decide whether it's trying to influence the 
individual or influence the environment that has allowed this 
radicalism to exist," said Singer. "The key to success is changing 
the environment to make radical Islam completely unacceptable ... 
It's not just draining the swamp. You have to poison the sea." Part 
of this attempt could be new laws to target hate speech and other 
forms of religious extremism. Proposals for the bill, which could 
enter parliament as early as September, include regulations 
demanding self-policing among Muslim groups such as requiring 
background checks on imams and closer scrutiny of financial 
records. "The Muslim community has to act," said a government 
statement. "You have to harness the energies of the moderate Muslim 
community." 

But there's also potential risks in asking Muslims to pick 
sides. "You could set up an ideological war within Britain's 
Muslims," said Carl Ernst, a specialist in Islamic affairs at the 
University of North Carolina. "You'll have people going into mosques 
to see who is a `good' Muslim and who is a `bad' Muslim. This could 
be even more dangerous and terribly divisive." It also raises the 
chance of "group punishment" if moderate Muslims are seen as failing 
the difficult task of reining in radicals, said Ernst. It's a worry 
that hasn't been lost on Muslim leaders calling for a groundswell 
against violence. "This time the British society has given you the 
benefit of the doubt," said Sunni Council spokesman Sardar Ahmed 
Qadri in a speech at the Birmingham mosque. "If you don't stand up 
now, the next time it could be different. Our mosques could be 
targeted. Our institutions could be targeted. Our communities could 
be targeted. I beg you: stand up and speak out." 








--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: [email protected]
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to