[Vision2020] The folly and danger of unscrutinizable religious belief: News
Article from NY Times
Carl Westberg
carlwestberg846@hotmail.com
Mon, 26 Apr 2004 10:02:42 -0700
Operative words, Ms. Kraut. "Small group." All religions, all causes, have
"small groups" of extremists who do not represent the religion or cause as a
whole. Including extremist Christian groups, Pat.
Carl Westberg Jr.
>From: "Pat Kraut" <pkraut@moscow.com>
>To: "vision2020" <vision2020@moscow.com>
>Subject: Re: [Vision2020] The folly and danger of unscrutinizable religious
>belief: News Article from NY Times
>Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2004 09:37:20 -0700
>
>Explain to me one more time how this is a religion of peace...
>PK
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Art Deco aka W. Fox
> To: Vision 2020
> Sent: Monday, April 26, 2004 7:16 AM
> Subject: [Vision2020] The folly and danger of unscrutinizable religious
>belief: News Article from NY Times
>
>
>
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> April 26, 2004
> Militants in Europe Openly Call for Jihad and the Rule of Islam
> By PATRICK E. TYLER
> and DON VAN NATTA Jr.
>
> UTON, England, April 24 - The call to jihad is rising in the
>streets of Europe, and is being answered, counterterrorism officials say.
>
> In this former industrial town north of London, a small group of
>young Britons whose parents emigrated from Pakistan after World War II have
>turned against their families' new home. They say they would like to see
>Prime Minister Tony Blair dead or deposed and an Islamic flag hanging
>outside No. 10 Downing Street.
>
> They swear allegiance to Osama bin Laden and his goal of toppling
>Western democracies to establish an Islamic superstate under Shariah law,
>like Afghanistan under the Taliban. They call the Sept. 11 hijackers the
>"Magnificent 19" and regard the Madrid train bombings as a clever way to
>drive a wedge into Europe.
>
> On Thursday evening, at a tennis center community hall in Slough,
>west of London, their leader, Sheik Omar Bakri Mohammad, spoke of his
>adherence to Osama bin Laden. If Europe fails to heed Mr. bin Laden's offer
>of a truce - provided that all foreign troops are withdrawn from Iraq in
>three months - Muslims will no longer be restrained from attacking the
>Western countries that play host to them, the sheik said.
>
> "All Muslims of the West will be obliged," he said, to "become his
>sword" in a new battle. Europeans take heed, he added, saying, "It is
>foolish to fight people who want death - that is what they are looking
>for."
>
> On working-class streets of old industrial towns like Crawley,
>Luton, Birmingham and Manchester, and in the Arab enclaves of Germany,
>France, Switzerland and other parts of Europe, intelligence officials say a
>fervor for militancy is intensifying and becoming more open.
>
> In Hamburg, Dr. Mustafa Yoldas, the director of the Council of
>Islamic Communities, saw a correlation to the discord in Iraq. "This is a
>very dangerous situation at the moment," Dr. Yoldas said. "My impression is
>that Muslims have become more and more angry against the United States."
>
> Hundreds of young Muslim men are answering the call of militant
>groups affiliated or aligned with Al Qaeda, intelligence and
>counterterrorism officials in the region say.
>
> Even more worrying, said a senior counterterrorism official, is
>that the level of "chatter" - communications among people suspected of
>terrorism and their supporters - has markedly increased since Mr. bin
>Laden's warning to Europe this month. The spike in chatter has given rise
>to acute worries that planning for another strike in Europe is advanced.
>
> "Iraq dramatically strengthened their recruitment efforts," one
>counterterrorism official said. He added that some mosques now display
>photos of American soldiers fighting in Iraq alongside bloody scenes of
>bombed out Iraqi neighborhoods. Detecting actual recruitments is almost
>impossible, he said, because it is typically done face to face.
>
> And recruitment is paired with a compelling new strategy to bring
>the fight to Europe.
>
> Members of Al Qaeda have "proven themselves to be extremely
>opportunistic, and they have decided to try to split the Western alliance,"
>the official continued. "They are focusing their energies on attacking the
>big countries" - the United States, Britain and Spain - so as to "scare"
>the smaller states.
>
> Some Muslim recruits are going to Iraq, counterterrorism officials
>in Europe say, but more are remaining home, possibly joining cells that
>could help with terror logistics or begin operations like the one that came
>to notice when the British police seized 1,200 pounds of ammonium nitrate,
>a key bomb ingredient, in late March, and arrested nine Pakistani-Britons,
>five of whom have been charged with trying to build a terrorist bomb.
>
> Stoking that anger are some of the same fiery Islamic clerics who
>preached violence and martyrdom before the Sept. 11 attacks.
>
> On Friday, Abu Hamza, the cleric accused of tutoring Richard Reid
>before he tried to blow up a Paris-to-Miami jetliner with explosives hidden
>in his shoe, urged a crowd of 200 outside his former Finsbury Park mosque
>to embrace death and the "culture of martyrdom."
>
> Though the British home secretary, David Blunkett, has sought to
>strip Abu Hamza of his British citizenship and deport him, the legal battle
>has dragged on for years while Abu Hamza keeps calling down the wrath of
>God.
>
> Also this week, over Mr. Blunkett's vigorous objection, a
>35-year-old Algerian held under emergency laws passed after Sept. 11 was
>released from Belmarsh Prison. The man, identified only as "G," suffered
>from severe mental illness, his lawyers told a special immigration appeals
>panel, which let him out of prison and put him under house arrest.
>
> Mr. Blunkett insisted that that should not be the final judgment
>on a man already found by one court "to be a threat to life and liberty."
>
> In an interview on the BBC over the weekend, Mr. Blunkett
>advocated a stronger deportation policy, initially focused on 12 foreign
>terror suspects held without charge since the Sept. 11 attacks.
>
> Despite tougher antiterrorism laws, the police, prosecutors and
>intelligence chiefs across Europe say they are struggling to contain the
>openly seditious speech of Islamic extremists, some of whom, they say, have
>been inciting young men to suicidal violence since the 1990's.
>
> One chapter in Sheik Omar's lectures these days is "The Psyche of
>Muslims for Suicide Bombing."
>
> The authorities say that laws to protect religious expression and
>civil liberties have the result of limiting what they can do to stop
>hateful speech. In the case of foreigners, they say they are often left to
>seek deportation, a lengthy and uncertain process subject to legal appeals,
>when the suspect can keep inciting attacks.
>
> That leaves the authorities to resort to less effective means,
>such as mouse-trapping Islamic radicals with immigration violations in
>hopes of making a deportation case stick. "In many countries, the laws are
>liberal and it's not easy," an official said.
>
> At a mosque in Geneva, an imam recently exhorted his followers to
>"impose the will of Islam on the godless society of the West."
>
> "It was quite virulent," said a senior official with knowledge of
>the sermon. "The imam was encouraging his followers to take over the
>godless society."
>
> While such a sermon may be incitement, recruitment takes a more
>shadowy course, and is hard to detect, a senior antiterrorism official
>said. "Believers are appealed to in the mosques, but the real conversations
>take place in restaurants or cafes or private apartments," the official
>said.
>
> While some clerics, like Abu Qatada - said to be the spiritual
>counselor of Mohamed Atta, who led the Sept. 11 hijacking team - remain in
>prison in Britain without charge, others like Sheik Omar, leader of a
>movement called Al Muhajiroun, carry on a robust ideological campaign.
>
> "There is no case against me," Sheik Omar said in an interview.
>Referring to calls by members of Parliament that he be deported, he added,
>"but they are Jewish" and "they have been calling for that for years."
>
> Among his ardent followers is Ishtiaq Alamgir, 24, who heads Al
>Muhajiroun in Luton and calls himself Sayful Islam, the sword of Islam. He
>says there are about 50 members here but exact numbers are secret.
>
> Most days, he and a handful of his followers run a recruitment
>stand on Dunstable Road much to the chagrin of the Muslim elders of Luton.
>
> Mainstream Muslims are outraged by the situation, saying the
>actions of a few are causing their communities to be singled out for
>surveillance and making the larger population distrustful of them.
>
> Muhammad Sulaiman, a stalwart of the mainstream Central Mosque
>here, was penniless when he arrived from the Kashmiri frontier of Pakistan
>in 1956. He raised money to build the Central Mosque here and now leads a
>campaign to ban Al Muhajiroun radicals from the city's 10 mosques.
>
> "This is show-off business," he says in accented English. "I don't
>want these kids in my mosque."
>
> Other community leaders look to the government to do something, if
>only to help prevent the demonization of British Muslims, or
>"Islamophobia," as some here call it.
>
> "I think these kids are being brainwashed by a few radical
>clerics," said Akhbar Dad Khan, another elder of the Central Mosque. He
>wants them prosecuted or deported. "We should be able to control this
>negativity," he said.
>
> In Slough, Sheik Omar spent much of his time Thursday night
>regaling his young followers with the erotic delights of paradise - sweet
>kisses and the pleasures of bathing with scores of women - while he also
>preached the virtues of death in Islamic struggle as a ticket to paradise.
>
> He spoke of terrorism as the new norm of cultural conflict, "the
>fashion of the 21st century," practiced as much by Tony Blair as by Al
>Qaeda.
>
> "We may be caught up in the target as the people of Manhattan
>were," he told them.
>
> And he warned Western leaders, "You may kill bin Laden, but the
>phenomenon, you cannot kill it - you cannot destroy it."
>
> "Our Muslim brothers from abroad will come one day and conquer
>here and then we will live under Islam in dignity," he said.
>
>
> Patrick E. Tyler reported from Luton, Slough and London and Don
>Van Natta Jr. from London. Souad Mekhennet contributed reporting from
>Germany.
>
>
>
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