Except embracing Australian values means rejecting Islamic values.
 
Bruce
 
 

http://www.theaustr
<http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20322022-601,00.html>
alian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20322022-601,00.html

Howard stands by Muslim integration
Richard Kerbaj
01sep06

JOHN Howard says he has no need to apologise for telling Muslims they need
to embrace Australian values.

Mr Howard sparked controversy yesterday after singling out Muslim migrants
for refusing to embrace Australian values and urged them to fully integrate
by treating women as equals and learning to speak English.


The call for a shift in attitude among some Muslims infuriated community
leaders and comes as The Australian revealed the Prime Minister's own
Islamic advisers have already accused Mr Howard and senior ministers of
fuelling hatred and mistrust by using "inflammatory and derogatory"
language. 
But Mr Howard today stood by his comments. "I don't apologise," he told
reporters. "I think they are missing the point and the point is that I don't
care and the Australian people don't care where people come from.


"There's a small section of the Islamic population which is unwilling to
integrate and I have said generally all migrants ... they have to
integrate."
Mr Howard said during a talkback radio discussion yesterday: "There is a
section, a small section of the Islamic population, and I say a small
section ... which is very resistant to integration. 


"Fully integrating means accepting Australian values, it means learning as
rapidly as you can the English language if you don't already speak it.


"And it means understanding that in certain areas, such as the equality of
men and women ... people who come from societies where women are treated in
an inferior fashion have got to learn very quickly that that is not the case
in Australia." 


The comments prompted a fierce reaction from young female Islamic leader
Iktimal Hage-Ali, a member of the Prime Minister's advisory group. She
accused Mr Howard of threatening to further marginalise Muslims. "There's no
value in pointing out the minority of the Muslim group," she said. 
"There's a whole lot of other ethnic communities whose parents, whose
grandparents don't speak the English language, and it's never a problem in
the mainstream Australian community for them to go on living their everyday
life without speaking the language. 


"Yet as soon as it's a person of Arab descent or a Muslim person ...
politicians feel like they need to bring it to mainstream attention as the
only group, like marginalising us even more then we already feel
marginalised today." 


As Mr Howard's Muslim reference group prepares to hand over its long-awaited
report on how to tackle extremism and other problems in the community, The
Australian can also reveal that the Islamic leaders the Prime Minister asked
to advise him were actually gagged when they raised concerns about
Government remarks demeaning the community. 
According to a draft of the final report of the Prime Minister's Muslim
Reference Group - to be handed to Parliamentary Secretary for Multicultural
Affairs Andrew Robb later this month - among the problems identified by the
community are isolation and radicalisation of converts and the treatment of
women and young people. 


But in the report, produced as part of the Government's $35million Muslim
strategy, the group criticises "government leaders" for public comments
fanning conflict and says the issue has grown worse in the context of the
Israel-Hezbollah war in southern Lebanon. 


While the yet-to-be-released report does not identify the Government
figures, The Australian has obtained a letter the reference group wanted to
release in March attacking a speech by Peter Costello, in which he said many
Australian Muslims had divided loyalties. 


But the group, led by academic Ameer Ali and made up of clerics and
community leaders, was stopped by the Government from publishing the letter.
It is understood the letter, which also refers to remarks made by Mr Howard,
Attorney-General Philip Ruddock and backbenchers Bronwyn Bishop and Danna
Vale, was sent to the Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs
for release, but never went past Mr Robb's office. 
The advisory group was furious about the Costello remarks and the furore
that focused on Muslims when Ms Bishop called for traditional Muslim dress
to be banned in schools and Ms Vale said Australia was in danger of aborting
itself "almost out of existence" and becoming a Muslim nation. 


They were also upset that Mr Howard singled out Muslims when he told The
Australian in February: "You can't find any equivalent in Italian, or Greek,
or Lebanese (Christian), or Chinese or Baltic immigration to Australia.
There is no equivalent of raving on about jihad, but that is the major
problem." 
The gagged letter says Mr Howard and the other MPs were "just a few"
politicians who had made remarks against "Islam and Muslims". 


"All we ask is that when Mr Costello, or any parliamentarian, wishes to have
the debate about the citizenship of Australia or the 'mushy, misguided
multiculturalism', they do so with the engagement of all Australians, rather
than alienating any one community group," it says. 


Yasmin Khan, a member of the reference body's seven sub-groups, said last
night she wrote the letter on behalf of the group and sent it to a
Department of Immigration employee who said she would have to send it to Mr
Robb's office. 


"She said ... 'We've got to release it through his (Mr Robb's) office' ...
so we left it at that and I waited and waited and waited."


A spokesman for Mr Robb last night told The Australian that the
Parliamentary Secretary for Multicultural Affairs, who is responsible for
the reference board, had not received the letter. DIMA spokesman Sandi Logan
said the department had received the letter and sent it back to members of
the reference group. 


Despite the dispute, the federal Government - which through DIMA has worked
closely with the reference group on the final report - has already agreed to
a raft of proposals. 


Under the $35 million strategy, the Government has agreed to a series of
programs ranging from a university for imams to issuing police with a
detailed booklet explaining Islam. 


In a section titled "Addressing isolation and marginalisation", the group
says society must be more inclusive to keep young Muslims away from
radicalism. 


"A more inclusive Australian society is a key issue in making rigid thinking
and possible involvement in terrorism less attractive to those at risk," the
26-page report says. 


Among other proposals from the group, set up in the wake of the London Tube
bombings last year, research will be conducted by University of Western
Australia and the West Australian Government into why young Muslims turn to
militant Islam through extreme literature. 


"The project aims to develop an understanding of the pathways whereby
second- and third-generation Muslim youth in Western liberal democracies
move to a position of militant Islamic identity," the report says.





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