Leeds asks: What made them do it? 
By Dominic Casciani 
BBC News community affairs  



There is fear on the streets of Leeds - but perhaps more than 
anything there is shock that some of its young men are suspected of
being Britain's first suicide bombers. But what makes young men from
Leeds become suicide bombers? Councillor Mohammed Iqbal is among 
those
who has spent 24 hours trying to work that out. 

As soon as police raided two homes in the heart of his ward, he 
cleared his diary, preparing for the fall-out. The last 24 hours has
seen him join other community leaders, from all backgrounds, in trying
to work out why four British men would turn themselves into bombs. 

But asked why they did it, he pauses and says: "I wish I knew." 

"There are young people from all backgrounds and communities who are
looking for reasons to do something wrong because they have nothing
else to do," he says. 

"This is one of the most deprived areas of the country, there are
many, many problems with jobs, education and so on. On top of that,
there is to some extent a gap between the generations. But whatever
the reasons, it's a disaster for this city and a disaster for
community relations. 

"We as a Muslim community need to take a role in dealing with this.
And that means the community should come forward and do its part, for
the sake of everyone." 

This is the view that echoes around the city - although what to 
actually do is the hardest part. Many of Leeds' taxi drivers hail from
the city's various Muslim communities - and the bombings are the talk
of the cab. One man said he feared for his family's safety. Another
said he was proud to have brought up his children as "British first
and everything else second". Much of what's flying around however is
rumour and speculation. 

Tension on the streets 

In Beeston itself tension is high, the air full of talk of fanatics,
suicide bombers and an on-going threat to British society. 


No young people on Wednesday were prepared to be photographed. Many
were furious at the presence of reporters on their streets (one
national newspaper sent 16 reporters) - and few held back with the
vitriol when approached. One young man working in a corner shop close
to the raided properties said he knew two of the four suspects well. 

Nothing he had seen had however prepared him for what they had 
apparently done, he said. 

But the young man, wearing traditional Pakistani dress and a beard,
stressed that one problem had to be addressed: Muslim leaders were
simply not listening to the young. 

"Extremists don't walk into mosques and say 'Excuse me, would you like
to join me in blowing up London?'. It just doesn't work that way," he
said. 

"But there is something else that is important. The older generations
and the younger ones just don't talk like you think they should.
There's a language barrier - the kids speaking English, the elders not
- and then there are huge cultural barriers. Some of the kids won't
talk to the elders, they think it's too difficult." 

Victim culture? 

One south Leeds youth worker told the BBC that the reasons for 
alienation were more complex still. 


He said that among all the communities he worked, he had experienced a
growing "victim culture" among some Muslim men - a culture linked to
an international Islamic political scene that emphasises the suffering
of Palestinians, Kashmiris and so on. This was something he also felt
far-right activists were capable of exploiting and upping the ante,
although there presence was limited. 

"Then the government aren't helping that either because they approach
people by putting labels on them. 

"These kids, whoever they are, want to create their own identities but
are being told they are Muslim, white, black or whatever. The majority
of the lads just want to be British but ever since 9/11 they've been
pushed back time and again onto a Muslim identity. 

"I think we're all shocked by what's happened - but a lot of us are
perhaps, on balance, not surprised." 

Catalyst? 

But all of these theories only go so far in explaining what has 
happened. 


There are gaps - and one of the key issues is what role did trips to
Pakistan play in the suicide bombers' development. Shehzad Tanweer
recently studied religion in Pakistan. In Muslim communities, it's not
usual for a young man or woman to spend some time abroad, particularly
doing charity work in similar ways to white Brits go on a gap year
backpacking experience. 

But for some Beeston people, the Pakistan trip is the key to working
out "who got at the boys". 

"I took my kids to Pakistan to give them a sense of their heritage -
and they were really shocked by the poverty," said one shopkeeper. "It
really had an effect on them. Now they put aside some of the money
they might spend on shoes to go to charities back there. 

"Now these are kids - impressionable, just as we all were in our time.
It wouldn't take much for someone with bad intent to twist the minds
of young men who have been to some of the poorest areas on earth and
convince them that they must act in a certain way." 


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/uk/4680237.stm

Published: 2005/07/13 16:21:13 GMT

© BBC MMV



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