Latest news with #SayeedaWarsi


Middle East Eye
11-03-2025
- Politics
- Middle East Eye
Baroness Warsi endorses government pulling funding from Islamophobia monitor
Former Conservative chair Baroness Sayeeda Warsi has endorsed the Labour government's decision to pull funding from a maligned Islamophobia reporting service accused of severely under-reporting hate crimes. Tell Mama, which is funded by the communities ministry, was founded in 2012. The Guardian reported on Saturday that no grant will be provided to the organisation from the end of March, leaving it facing closure. "I support this decision by the government and its decision to re think how it funds the monitoring of anti Muslim hate," Warsi said on social media platform X on Tuesday. Warsi, who is widely considered a leading figure on Islamophobia in Britain, was one of the early advocates for Tell Mama to be funded by the government as a minister in David Cameron's cabinet. "I was there at the outset of Tell MAMA and despite opposition from my government colleagues at the time fought for it to be funded in government," she said, "however sadly over the years too many questions have arisen which in my view make the organization unfit for purpose." New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Last March, the previous Conservative government halted plans to appoint Tell Mama's founder, Fiyaz Mughal OBE, as its independent adviser on anti-Muslim hatred. That decision came after it received notice of a Byline Times investigation which revealed Mughal had suppressed a Tell Mama-funded report on the Conservative Party's ties to Islamophobic and antisemitic political parties. 'Consistently lower' figures In July 2024, Byline Times reported that Tell Mama under-reported anti-Muslim hate crimes by more than 90 percent between 2017 to 2022. Its published figures were "consistently lower than anti-Muslim hate crime statistics published by the Home Office based on police data". Police data itself was found to systematically underestimate hate crimes. In response, Tell Mama insisted "it is impossible to record all hate crimes and particularly difficult given the scale, nature, geographical location and nationality of British Muslims from over 50 Muslim-majority countries". Warsi is now an independent peer after quitting the Conservatives last September, complaining that the party had moved too far right. 'My regular engagement with a hyper diverse British Muslim community has shown that large sections simply do not trust or chose [Tell Mama] to report their experiences of anti Muslim racism and attacks' - Baroness Warsi She said on Tuesday that "too often my regular engagement with a hyper diverse British Muslim community has shown that large sections simply do not trust or chose TM [Tell Mama] to report their experiences of anti Muslim racism and attacks. "This at a time of rising anti Muslim hate is unacceptable," she added. "The government SHOULD fund community reporting of anti Muslim racism and attacks as they do for British Jews via the Community Security Trust but sadly TM is not it." Police sources told the Guardian that the information Tell Mama provided it had been "invaluable". Tell Mama said it had received 10,700 reports of anti-Muslim hate crimes in 2024, showing a sharp increase. Founder Mughal told the Guardian: "There are going to be more individuals targeted, we know that in the current environment, and where are they going to go? "This is an injustice at a time where I have never seen anti-Muslim rhetoric become so mainstream." A spokesperson for the communities ministry said on Saturday: "Religious and racial hatred has absolutely no place in our society, and we will not tolerate Islamophobia in any form. This year we have made up to £1m of funding available to Tell Mama to provide support for victims of Islamophobia, and we will set out our approach to future funding in due course." Exclusive: British Muslim Network backed by charity set up by former archbishop Welby Read More » The announcement comes after the ministry announced the creation of a new working group last month to formulate a definition of Islamophobia and "support a wider stream of work to tackle the unacceptable incidents of anti-Muslim hatred". The government has also backed a new British Muslim body, the British Muslim Network (BMN), which launched in late February with Warsi's involvement and aims to engage with the government. Critics have suggested that the BMN lacks credibility, warning that the government could use the network to continue to avoid engaging with the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB). Labour has adopted the previous government's policy of boycotting the MCB, the largest umbrella body claiming to represent British Muslims and with over 500 member organisations. But the BMN's leadership has insisted that it does not aim to challenge the MCB's role, arguing that the government should engage with a "whole range" of Muslim groups, including both the MCB and BMN. "For too long British Muslims have been made to feel their voices do not matter," Warsi said ahead of the BMN's launch. "The British Muslim Network is part of a much-needed effort to change that."


Middle East Eye
25-02-2025
- Politics
- Middle East Eye
Labour's faith minister backs new British Muslim Network
Labour's faith minister has backed the British Muslim Network (BMN), a new national body appearing to undermine the leadership credentials of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), ahead of its launch on Tuesday evening. Labour's faith minister, Lord Wajid Khan, has thrown his support behind the new network, along with deputy speaker and Conservative MP Nusrat Ghani, former Conservative chair Baroness Sayeeda Warsi and ex-England cricketer Azeem Rafiq, according to the Guardian. The launch event, set to take place in London on Tuesday evening, follows a series of controversies surrounding the network. Critics have accused the BMN of lacking credibility within British Muslim communities and undermining the MCB's attempts to engage with the Labour government. But the BMN's leadership has argued that the government should engage with a "whole range" of Muslim groups, including both the MCB and BMN. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters 'Start-up days' Last July, Middle East Eye first reported on plans to create a new Labour-supported Muslim group designed to engage with the government. MEE then revealed earlier this month that the initiative had lost most of its backing, including hundreds of thousands of pounds in funding, with several Muslim MPs saying privately that they would not attend the BMN's launch. On BBC Radio Four on Tuesday morning, BMN co-chair Akeela Ahmed was asked whether "reports of withdrawals of offers of funding for your body and disquiet from some Muslim Labour MPs" were true. Exclusive: British Muslim Network backed by charity set up by former archbishop Welby Read More » Ahmed replied: "It's not true. We are in very early days, we are in start-up days at the moment. We are privately funded, and we are speaking to people within the British Muslim communities about funding for the organisation, but we haven't had any funding withdrawn." Qari Asim, an imam and another BMN co-chair, recently joined other Muslim scholars in signing a pact called the "Reconciliation Accords" with Jewish leaders, including Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis. The accords were presented as "rebuilding a meaningful trust between Muslim and Jewish communities" and the signatories, including Asim, met King Charles at Buckingham Palace on 11 February. The BMN's advisory board, made public this week, includes Abdurahman Sayed, the CEO of London's Muslim Cultural Heritage Centre, and Zahed Amanullah, a former director of the Concordia Forum thinktank Amanullah, currently a fellow at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, spoke at an event hosted by the UAE-backed "countering extremism" organisation Hedayah last December on countering antisemitism and Islamophobia. Questions of representation Headlines have focused on the support the BMN has received from Sayeeda Warsi, who was the first Muslim woman to serve in cabinet under David Cameron's Conservative government. Warsi is now an independent peer after quitting the Conservatives last September, complaining that the party had moved too far right. "For too long British Muslims have been made to feel their voices do not matter," Warsi told the Guardian ahead of the BMN's launch. "The British Muslim Network is part of a much-needed effort to change that." 'For too long British Muslims have been made to feel their voices do not matter' - Baroness Sayeeda Warsi The BMN's website says: "British Muslim communities face many internal and external challenges - such as social and economic disadvantage, anti-Muslim prejudice and inadequate funding and professional advice. "Yet our communities also hold immense talent, expertise and potential, which can offer solutions not just to our own challenges, but to those of wider British society." An invitation to the launch event, seen by MEE, said the network had been created as a result of 'the joining of many heads and hearts over the past few months and is linked to conversations that have been taking place in British Muslim communities for many years.' The network has insisted it does not aim to challenge the Muslim Council of Britain's role, with Ahmed saying the BMN aims to "complement" the MCB's work. Critics have suggested that the BMN's co-chairs and advisory board lack credibility, warning that the government could use the network to continue to avoid engaging with the MCB, Britain's largest umbrella body claiming to represent British Muslims. Consecutive governments have followed a policy of refusing to engage with the MCB - despite it having over 500 member organisations, including mosques, schools, local and county councils, professional networks and advocacy groups. Exclusive: British Muslim Network backed by charity set up by former archbishop Welby Read More » Starmer's government adopted this approach and even ignored communications from the MCB during the far-right riots that raged across the country for over a week in August. The BMN does not claim to be a similarly representative body. But the faith minister's support signals that the government is likely to engage with the new body, despite its ongoing boycott of the MCB. One well-placed Labour insider, who asked to remain anonymous, told MEE the BMN risked facilitating "attempts to divide the Muslim community into so-called good Muslims that will be allowed to engage with the government, and so-called bad Muslims that will be boycotted." This is a characterisation that the BMN rejects. Speaking to the BBC on Tuesday, Ahmed said the government should engage with the MCB. "The MCB is one group that is working in this space, and the government should engage with it," she said. "But the government should also engage with a whole range of British Muslim organsiations and British Muslims around the country. "That engagement is not taking place," Ahmed added.