IQNA

Muslim Activist Urges Scotland to Stop Denying Islamophobia

14:45 - November 21, 2022
News ID: 3481348
TEHRAN (IQNA) – A Muslim activist in Scotland has urged the government to stop denying Islamophobia and warned that hostility in classrooms, workplaces and on the streets are on the rise.

Anti-Islamic graffiti has been sprayed on a mosque in North Lanarkshire in 2016.

 

Omar Afzal, of the Scottish Association of Mosques, said more must be done to tackle the issue and the misconception that anti-Islamic hate is not a problem north of the border.

He spoke out during Islamophobia Awareness Month, a national campaign aiming to raise awareness and highlight the positive contributions of British Muslims, and criticised the decision of the UK Government to abandon an attempt to define Islamophobia

Afzal, whose concerns were backed by both the Muslim Councils of Britain and Scotland, said: “Tackling denial is very important. To wilfully choose not to define the problem is a form of outright denial that Islamophobia even exists.

“This revelation comes despite new Home Office hate-crime statistics, published last month, showing that 42% of religious hate crime offences in England and Wales were targeted against Muslims.

“The report of the Inquiry into Islamophobia in Scotland smashed the idea of Scottish exceptionalism – a type of denial that recognises Islamophobia exists but believes it’s not as prevalent or pervasive here. The report shows how deep-rooted, structural and systemic discrimination against Scottish Muslims is and how it manifests itself in everyday life.”

The report, which surveyed 447 people and organisations across the country, identified key trends, with more than three-quarters of Muslim respondents feeling Islamophobia is becoming worse, rising to 82% of people in Glasgow.

One respondent said: “We feel the environment has become more and more hostile for our communities. Brexit most definitely has not helped. It has given a bigger voice to those who hate and even an excuse to promote their hate.

“All black and minority ­ethnic communities are suffering. Under reporting of hate crime is a major issue. Communities need reassurance that help is available, and perpetrators will be dealt with by the law.”

People reported experiencing Islamophobia at work, school, college or university, in the street, in public buildings such as a shop or restaurant or on public transport.

Afzal, who specialises in ­advocacy and community representation for Muslims in Scotland, said: “Some 83% of Muslim respondents reported having experienced Islamophobia directly, 75% saying Islamophobia was an everyday issue and more than half had changed their behaviour as a result of Islamophobia or in fear of it.

“Worryingly, only 22% of respondents, who had faced Islamophobia actually came forward to report it. Very often, this is out of fear of the repercussions, such as being frozen out in their workplace or singled out in schools.”

In 2018, a group of MPs and peers drew up a working definition of anti-Muslim hate, stating the absence of one was allowing Islamophobia to “increase in society to devastating effect”.

Describing Islamophobia as a “type of racism that targets expressions of Muslimness”, the definition was accepted by Labour and other opposition parties but rejected by the Conservative government.

An expert adviser to the UK Government was hired but his work was reportedly halted after Boris Johnson became prime minister. Afzal said limited progress was being made in Scotland. He said: “All of Scotland’s political parties, including the Scottish Conservatives, adopted the preeminent all-party parliamentary group’s definition of Islamophobia in 2019.

“Last month, the SNP passed a resolution by councillor Danish Ashraf for the Scottish Government to adopt the definition too. Pam Gosal MSP presented a motion in the Scottish Parliament recognising Islamophobia Awareness Month and vocal support from across the political spectrum is important in tackling denial.”

 

Source: The Sunday Post

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