
East London Mosque 'was threatened after the 7/7 bombings'
Although the mosque publicly condemned the attacks, Mr Khan said many Muslims in the community faced increased scrutiny, suspicion and hostility."Shortly after the incident, we received a couple of bomb threats," he said. "I remember it was two Fridays actually. Friday is the busiest day for the mosque and so we had to call the police."We also received white powder by post, and again we had to call the police. 'Fortunately, it wasn't anthrax."He said many Muslim women were 'afraid to go on the bus and the underground' even though one of the congregation of his mosque, a young woman in her 20s, was killed in the bombing."Women's hijabs were pulled, they were spat on."I remember one incident where a woman was refused entry on the bus. The bus driver, he was probably Islamophobic or racist."My own sisters, my wife, they felt very scared to go out."
'Alienated and attacked'
Shahmina, a pharmacist, was just a teenager when the bombings took place."I was 13. And all of a sudden I startEd feeling quite alienated," she said. "Suddenly my faith felt like something that could be attacked."We felt afraid to openly be Muslim. 'We would avoid certain areas if we knew there wouldn't be a huge amount of Muslims there, because then we felt isolated."It was like you could become a prime target for Islamophobia and racism."It became rife after these attacks because what we were seeing in the media was a depiction that these attacks were central to being a Muslim and being Islamic and it wasn't - these attacks were isolated to individuals."
Two decades on, London's Muslim community has more than doubled to 1.3m people, but for Shahmina, it is still difficult."I'm feeling it coming back again with the resurgence of what's happening in the international political sphere," she said."I think relations can improve if we start changing the language we use around Muslims and people of different ethnic groups."If we shift how we talk about them when a crime is committed, we may find that actually the general public will have a different view on our community."
At the East london Mosque, community leaders regularly hold interfaith events and open days in the hopes of promoting a better understanding between people of different faiths.Imam Shaqib Juneja is a former teacher and now works with a Muslim youth group."We don't want people to feel that we're different," he said. "That's an important point, because one of the things that happened after 7/7 was a lot of the talk that was happening from politicians, from the media, about the portrayal of Muslims, perhaps even on the BBC - it made Muslims feel we are different."It's not the community that has the problem, it's a few individuals."But when it's portrayed as the community having the problem, people start to feel there is a lack of trust."We're people just like everybody else. We're human beings. There are more things that we have in common than actually make us different."
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The Sun
8 minutes ago
- The Sun
Urgent hunt for naked man in a face mask after he's spotted prowling streets in ‘concerning' CCTV
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Daily Mail
8 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
How a teenage kiss at a funfair led to Jack Woodley being kicked and stabbed by a pack of bloodthirsty yobs... and the 'chilling' detail that stunned the court
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For four years, most of the teenagers, aged between 14 and 17 at the time of the sickening attack, have been protected by a reporting restriction banning their identity from being revealed until their 18th birthdays. But on Wednesday, Lewis Rose, the youngest of the ten murderers, became an adult, paving the way for the twisted mob to finally be unmasked as one. Their mugshots were finally released, allowing the public to see the faces of evil. Rose, Calum Maddison, Sonny Smith, Leighton Mayo, Blaine Sewell, Grant Wheatley, Clayton Owen, Joe Lathan, Tyler Brewis and Rhys Wear, were the boys handed life sentences with a combined minimum term of more than 124 years. Tragically, it was these 10 animals against one. Jack was hunted down and stabbed in the back during an 80-second attack while making his way home from the Houghton Feast funfair, in Houghton-le-Spring near Sunderland. The 10 boys who murdered Jack Woodley All of the killers, who can now be named after turning 18, were handed life sentences with the following minimum terms: Calum Maddison, 17 years Blaine Sewell, 13 years and five months Sonny Smith, 15 years Grant Wheatley, 15 years Lewis Rose, eight years Tyler Brewis, 13 years Rhys Wear, 10 years Leighton Mayo, 11 years Joe Lathan, 11 years Clayton Owen, 11 years It was Maddison, who had recently turned 15, who delivered the fatal stab wound, but all ten were convicted of Jack's murder under the principle of joint enterprise as they were deemed to be equally responsible. Most of the boys lied to police in a desperate bid to deflect their involvement. Yet none of them even attempted to suggest Jack had provoked the savage assault that has plunged his family into unimaginable grief. As one of the boys' lawyers suggested, it would have been easy for the 10-strong group to pin the blame on Jack as being the aggressor. But the truth was, he simply did nothing wrong that night. He had simply gone to the Houghton Feast funfair with friends when the atmosphere became hostile. Jack was challenged to a fight by a stranger, but sensibly walked away thinking better of it. But as he neared the crowded Britannia Inn, then 16-year-old Sewell ran up and punched him and seized him in a headlock, triggering a terrifying ten on one melee before Maddison plunged his 9in (25cm) knife into Jack's back. He was left to die in an alleyway and tragically died in hospital the following day - his life cut short by a random 'mob attack'. The 11-week trial at Newcastle Crown Court heard he was targeted for a 'trivial reason' - something not one of the 10 defendants ever explained. Jack's family were forced to sit through weeks of evidence and recounting their son's brutal death - but have been left no nearer to understanding why he was targeted. 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The trial heard how when a girl kissed a boy, the boy's ex-girlfriend kicked off and a minor scuffle broke out between the pair. Jack witnesses the girls fighting and asked another boy - one of his would-be killers - what it was about. They joked about it and went their separate ways. Less than an hour later, that boy would be part of the gang who so brutally set upon Jack. Rumours spread that Jack had threatened to 'punch the head in' of one of the boys - lie that had been completely fabricated. This, in the eyes of the prosecutors, was their plot to 'create a conflict with Jack so they could attack him'. When challenged to a one-on-one fight, Jack sensibly decided to walk off. But he was followed and set upon by the bloodthirsty gang. Mobile phone footage of the attack showed there were shouts of 'get the chopper out' - referring to the knife - heard. One of the mob was 'armed with a very dangerous knife', while another admitted taking a knuckle duster out that night. One witness said the youths were like a 'herd of lions' when they attacked. Another witness who saw the violence said: 'Jack got down on the floor so he could curl up in a ball. 'He was so scared. There were so many punches raining down on him. They were brutal. 'Everyone in the group was just kicking the life out of Jack, stamping on his head 'The lads were savagely kicking Jack, like zombies attacking an animal. 'I remember the terrified look on Jack's face as he was being kicked, punched and stamped on.' For all the brutality that led to the death of an 18-year-old boy, none of the 10 killers could say why they did what they did that night. Most said they could not remember or said it happened too fast. The incident lasted around 80 seconds and there was only a small amount of CCTV and mobile footage. Questions were asked over why so many of the boys had their hoods up. One claimed it was because he felt anxious about his hair. 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The nine others were charged as the prosecution argued the fatal blow would not have been delivered if the other members hadn't launched the frenzied attack. By targeting Jack outside the Britannia Inn, each of them contributed to the killing even if their involvement was less than the other. 'The prosecution say all ten defendants participated in this joint attack, using violence themselves or intentionally encouraging others to use violence,' Mr McKone QC said. The reason, argued by the prosecution, for Jack's death was that this was simply a gang of boys wanting to inflict harm on an individual. In a heartbreaking tribute, Jack's mother, Zoey McGill, said: 'Jack was my reason to live and succeed in life. From the moment Jack was born he brought light and love to us all. 'The devastation of losing Jack is immense and far reaching. The trauma of reliving this whole incident over a long trial has had a devastating effect on us all. We cannot see a way of recovering from this. 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BBC News
8 minutes ago
- BBC News
List of key Jersey 2026 and 2027 election dates published
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