http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2400151,00.html

Kelly penalises mosques' failure to tackle terror
By Sean O’Neill and Philip Webster



THE Government withdrew its support from Britain’s largest Muslim 
organisation yesterday after accusing it of failing to lead the fight 
against religious extremism.
Ruth Kelly, the Communities Secretary, attacked the Muslim Council of 
Britain (MCB) for boycotting Holocaust Memorial Day, criticising 
police anti-terrorist operations and “sitting on the sidelines” in the 
campaign against extremists.


Muhammad Abdul Bari, the secretary-general of the MCB, was invited to 
hear Ms Kelly’s speech, which was delivered to a Muslim audience, but 
refused to attend.
Ms Kelly said that she was embarking on “a fundamental rebalancing” of 
the Government’s relationship with Muslim organisations.
Until now ministers have viewed the MCB, which represents 400 
organisations and hundreds of mosques around the country, as the most 
important voice among Britain’s two million Muslims.
But Ms Kelly said that in future she would engage with and give 
funding to organisations that represented young Muslims and Muslim 
women and which were taking a “proactive leadership role in tackling 
extremism and defending our shared values”.
The Communities Secretary has £11 million remaining from a fund 
established last year to combat extremism.
Ms Kelly highlighted the MCB’s repeated refusal to participate in 
Holocaust Memorial Day as a serious failing which set a poor example.
She said: “There are some people who don’t feel it right to join in 
the commemorations of Holocaust Memorial Day even though it has helped 
raise awareness not just of the Jewish Holocaust, but also more 
contemporary atrocities like the Rwanda genocide.
“I can’t help wondering why those in leadership positions who say they 
want to achieve religious tolerance and a cohesive society would 
choose to boycott an event which marks, above all, our common human- 
ity and respect for each other.”
Ms Kelly also attacked groups which criticised British foreign policy 
as anti-Muslim and denigrated the police.
Dr Bari and the MCB have been critical of the bungled anti-terrorist 
raid in Forest Gate, East London, this year and have argued strongly 
that British policy in Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan has undermined 
security.
Ms Kelly said: “The police and security services have disrupted a 
number of further attacks. And we know that followers of al-Qaeda are 
planning others. The scale of the threat means great urgency. And this 
can produce mistakes.
“But these mistakes have sometimes been seized on by some to falsely 
suggest that the police are the enemy rather than the terrorists. They 
aren’t — they deserve all of our support. A serious and tough security 
response is inevitable for all of our safety.”
Dr Bari responded angrily to Ms Kelly’s remarks. He said the minister 
was making “a veiled threat” about who would qualify for funding in 
future.



Dr Bari added: “Every organisation has the right to apply for 
government funding — but agreeing with government policy should not be 
a criteria for receiving that money.
“For sometime now, mainstream Muslim organisations have not been 
consulted. We have been talked to, we have not been talked with.”


Inayat Bunglawala, assistant general of the MCB, said: “We have the 
sense that the Government only wants to speak to organisations that 
mirror its own views. It is untenable to continue to deny that Iraq 
and Afghanistan have not undermined our security.”
The debate about the role of British Muslims in society was further 
intensified by Harriet Harman in the row over the wearing of the veil. 
Ms Harman, a minister in the Department for Constitutional Affairs, 
said that the veil was “an obstacle to women’s participation, on equal 
terms, in society”.
She told the New Statesman: “I want women to be fully included. If you 
want equality, you have to be in society, not hidden away from it.” 




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