MESSAGE TO THE LEADERS OF THE NSS : THERE ARE NO ROMAN CATHOLIC PATROLS, IN THE STREETS OF LONDON !
Muslim patrols are a sign of things to come
Posted: Thu, 31 Jan 2013
by Maajid Nawaz
By Maajid Nawaz
On the
streets of Greece supporters of the far-Right Golden Dawn party patrol
neighbourhoods, attacking anyone who looks like an immigrant. In Denmark
a group calling itself Call to Islam has declared parts of the country
to be "sharia-controlled zones" and its "morality police" confront
drinkers and partygoers. In France right-wing vigilantes ran Roma
families out of a Marseilles estate and burnt down their camp. In Spain
nine Islamist extremists recently kidnapped a woman, tried her for
adultery under sharia and attempted to execute her before she managed to
escape. And here English Defence League thugs march in towns and cities
"reclaiming" the streets from Muslims.
Something
very worrying is spreading across Europe. Fascists and Islamist
extremists alike are copying what Hitler's Brownshirts excelled at –
enforcing with threats and violence their version of the law in
neighbourhoods. And the moderate middle is left gawping.
In
Britain"Muslims Against the Crusaders" have recently declared an
Islamic Emirates Project. They are seeking to enforce their brand of
sharia in 12 British cities, naming the two London boroughs of Waltham
Forest and Tower Hamlets among their targets. Little surprise then that
in these two boroughs "Muslim patrols" have taken to the streets and
begun enforcing a narrow view of sharia over unsuspecting locals.
Petrified
Saturday-night revellers have been stopped by hooded thugs in these
so-called Muslim areas, who warn them that alcohol, "immodest" dress or
homosexuality are now banned. To add to the humiliation of being
threatened, all this is filmed and uploaded on to the internet. Now some
shops in East London no longer feel free to employ uncovered women or
sell alcohol without fear of violent reprisals.
While
this street-level problem festers across Europe, al-Qaeda and its
affiliates are busy capitalising on the chaos of the post-Arab Spring
world. Syria, Libya, Mali and Somalia are being ravaged by jihadist
outfits, and all of them are attracting European-born Islamists seeking
the thrill of real combat.
British jihadists with
South London accents have already been documented as shooting the
British journalist John Cantlie in Syria. Scores of young European-born
Arabs and Somalis are following in the footsteps of British Pakistanis
in travelling to lawless conflict zones. What happens when these men,
schooled in the use of political violence in far-flung places, return to
Britain?
Five men have been arrested for assault,
but the Muslim patrols could become a lot more dangerous and, perhaps
willing to maim or kill if they are joined by battle-hardened jihadis.
The
killing last year of Osama bin Laden was hailed as a milestone in
defeating al-Qaeda. President Obama was keen to portray himself as
having severed the head of the snake. But no one man ever controlled
this loose movement. And while it may lie dormant for a few years in
different parts of the world, there are plenty of committed grassroots
ideologues to ensure that it will rise again. And worryingly, the
Islamist world view is a entrenched default position even among many
non-devout British Muslims.
I fear that the Muslim
patrols are a sign of things to come. As Syria becomes the new
Afghanistan, we should prepare for the blowback from a new wave of
extremists.
The Government has a sensible policy to
challenge extremism at home and abroad. It has committees, partnerships
and policy papers all in place that understand the need to build
cohesion at the national level and root out extremism in local
communities. But very little has actually happened at the grassroots. I
struggle to see initiatives that inoculate young Britons against
extremist messaging.
The longer we stand by and watch
the far Right and Islamists impose their dogma on our streets, the more
the extremes will become mainstream for a rising new generation.
Maajid Nawaz is Chairman of the Quilliam Foundation and author of Radical: My Journey from Islamist Extremism to a Democratic Awakening. This article was originally published in The Times and is reproduced with permission.
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