Difference between revisions of "Ed Husain"
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− | In October 2009, when a report produced by the [[Institute of Race Relations]] | + | In October 2009, when a report produced by the [[Institute of Race Relations]] suggested that the [[Preventing Violent Extremism]] programme was being used as a cover by the Police and Intelligence Services for collating intelligence and information on the Muslim community in Britain,<ref>[http://www.irr.org.uk/pdf2/spooked.pdf Arun Kundnani, Spooked: How Not to Prevent Violent Extremism] Institute of Race Relations, October 2009, - accessed 25 November 2009</ref> Ed Husain argued that if the intelligence being collated was for the purpose of stopping 'people getting killed and committing terrorism, it is good and it is right'. He also added that 'It would be morally wrong of a taxpayer-funded programme designed to prevent terrorism if it was not designed to gather intelligence in order to stop that terrorism from happening'.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/oct/16/anti-terrorism-strategy-spies-innocents Vikram Dodd, Government Anti-Terrorism Strategy Spies on Innocent, 16 October 2009, the Guardian] - accessed 24 February 2010</ref> He also suggested that any individual who gave the impression that they were putting forth extremist views should not only be challenged in a civic way, but also handed over to the Police and investigated.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/video/2009/oct/16/prevent-spying-muslims-mi5 Reactions to Prevent Programme Spying on British Muslims, the Guardian, 16 October 2009] - accessed 24/02/10</ref>Ed Husain also beleives that the gathering of intelligence outweighed civil liberty concerns - 'That's the name of the game. It's not about doing the right thing by Islamists or by liberal do-gooders, it's about creating a society where liberal do-gooders survive freely.'<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/oct/16/anti-terrorism-strategy-spies-innocents Vikram Dodd, Government Anti-Terrorism Strategy Spies on Innocent, 16 October 2009, the Guardian] - accessed 24 February 2010</ref> |
===On Darfur=== | ===On Darfur=== |
Revision as of 11:04, 24 February 2010
Ed Husain is the co-director of the Quilliam Foundation, author of The Islamist and a member of the Labour Party.[1]
Ed Husain's real name is Mohammed Mahbub Husain. He was born on 25 December 1975 and raised in East London. According to his own account he was formerly involved with political Islamic organisations such as the Jamat-e-Islami, the Muslim Brotherhood and Hizb ut-Tahrir.
In his initial Quilliam Foundation biography that has now been altered, it was stated that Ed Husain was a ‘campus recruiter’ for Hizb ut-Tahrir who ‘laid the ideological seeds for much of the contemporary Islamism’s manifestations in Britain’.[2] According to his own analysis of his own activism, Ed Husain stated that he had ‘radicalized [his] entire college [because] ‘there were Muslim women walking around in veils and face covers [and] Muslim men going around putting up posters’. [3]
Hizb ut-Tahrir has rejected the claim made by Ed Husain that he was a member of the organisation. Taji Mustafa, the Media spokesperson for Hizb ut-Tahrir stated that ‘Ed Husain was never a member of Hizb-ut-Tahrir. We need to have our facts very clear.’[4] In response to Taji Mustafa’s claims, Ed Husain stated that he had ‘attended cell structure meetings for two years’, but failed to clarify whether he was an official member or not. [5] Despite this though, Ed Husain has continuously claimed that he was a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir and went onto write the Islamist, which is based on his experience of being a member of the organisation.
Contents
Ed Husain & Neo-Cons
Ed Husain has been repeatedly accused of being a neo-conservative and a Zionist sympathiser. In response to these claims, Ed Husain and Maajid Nawaz co-authored an article entitled 'Putting the Record Straight' on the Guardian's Comment is Free blog and argued that they were being accused by Islamists for being neo-conservatives and Zionists, whilst they were being accused by Zionists for being ‘Islamists’ and ‘soft-Jihadists’.[6]
The questions about Ed Husain’s alleged links with a Neoconservativism emerged from the fact that the Quilliam Foundation had close associations with author of ‘Neo-Conservativism: Why we Need it’ and Director of the Centre for Social Cohesion, Douglas Murray. Also, the members of the Quilliam Foundation have been jointly working on the attack blog, the Spittoon.
Ed Husain, until a recent falling out and public display of personal attacks,[7] earned widespread acclaim and applaud from Melanie Phillips who is on the extreme right-wing of the political spectrum and a staunch Zionist. In her review of the Islamist, she stated:
Ed Hussain should be applauded for his courage in writing this. It should also serve to wake people up to a truth they are continuing to deny, that fanatical ideas can kill — and that if we in Britain are serious about halting the scourge of Islamist terrorism, the government must ban the fanatics of Hizb ut Tahrir who do so much to propel impressionable young people towards mass murder. Ed Hussain displays intellectual honesty and guts. The British government displays neither.[8]
Opinions on Contest & Counter-Terrorism
When the widely controversial and wide-sweeping Contest 2 British counter-terrorism strategy was announced, Ed Husain in a Telegraph article stated:
Hazel Blears, the gutsy Communities Secretary, supports a tough approach. But she is being undermined repeatedly by the Muslim advisers who surround her and who have a major stake in ensuring the new strategy goes in a different direction. Let us be clear: Contest 2 is about ensuring Britain's security, uprooting terrorism and creating a proud, pluralist nation at home with liberal, secular democracy. It is about shifting the current lethargic thinking that surrounds Islamist extremism. It is not about appeasing activist Muslim men who lobby for Hamas. The Contest 2 White Paper must be more courageous than what we have seen from this Government to date. It should disregard the findings of focus groups, the self-serving advice of "community experts", and name the monster that we face: Islamist extremism.[9]
In the same article, he continued his calling of the Muslim Council of Britain 'extremists'. he concluded by stating - 'We cannot defeat terrorism by hugging extremists. As Charles Colson, chief counsel to President Nixon, once said, "if you grab them by the balls, the hearts and minds will follow'[10]
Preventing Violent Extremism
In October 2009, when a report produced by the Institute of Race Relations suggested that the Preventing Violent Extremism programme was being used as a cover by the Police and Intelligence Services for collating intelligence and information on the Muslim community in Britain,[11] Ed Husain argued that if the intelligence being collated was for the purpose of stopping 'people getting killed and committing terrorism, it is good and it is right'. He also added that 'It would be morally wrong of a taxpayer-funded programme designed to prevent terrorism if it was not designed to gather intelligence in order to stop that terrorism from happening'.[12] He also suggested that any individual who gave the impression that they were putting forth extremist views should not only be challenged in a civic way, but also handed over to the Police and investigated.[13]Ed Husain also beleives that the gathering of intelligence outweighed civil liberty concerns - 'That's the name of the game. It's not about doing the right thing by Islamists or by liberal do-gooders, it's about creating a society where liberal do-gooders survive freely.'[14]
On Darfur
On August 10 Ed Husain wrote an article in the Independent entitled 'Where is the Muslim anger over Darfur?'[15] in which he accused Muslims of being silent over what claims is the death of 400,000 Darfuris[16]. (The most reliable estimate of the number of deaths for all sides before the violence subsided is 118,142, according to a US Government Accountability Office report.[17] of which less than 30 percent were due to violence). Bizarrely, after admitting that 'pollster James Zogby found 80 per cent of those questioned in four Arab countries were concerned about Darfur and felt it should have more media attention' and that 'some commentators in Muslim-majority countries are questioning their leaders' support for Bashir', Husain goes on to denounce 'Muslims' amnesia about Darfur', which according to him, is 'symptomatic of the malaise affecting the public face of a faith that lacks the confidence to engage in constructive debate or renewal'. [18]
Supporters
Melanie Phillips
Earlier a key backer of Ed Husain, Phillips went on to denounce him after he wrote an article critical of the Israeli assault on Gaza. She called Husain's piece 'stupid and ignorant' and 'poisonous' which placed him on the wrong side 'in the great battle to defend civilisation against barbarism'.[19] In turn Ed Husain writes he is frightened of Phillips's 'zealotry and ignorance'. He adds: 'How did we produce a public commentator filled with such anger, venom and hatred?' Interestingly, in the article Husain defends the Islamic Society of Britain and the Muslim Council of Britain and its spokesman Inayat Bunglawala against Phillips's attacks. He adds:
- The Israel First test, which she seeks to impose on British Muslims (as well as an American president), reeks of racism. Why is Israel more important than any other country in the world? With leading British Muslims increasingly supporting a secular state, democracy, women's rights, gay rights and liberal pluralism, and opposing Islamist extremism – then still be attacked as "extremists" or "Islamist" because they don't support Likud's plans for Israel is bullying and uncompromising in the extreme [...] But do fairness and humanity matter to Phillips? [...] To that demented mindset, whatever Muslims do, right or wrong, principled or otherwise, we will always be subject to Robert Spencer's brigade of trolls who will shout "taqiyya" to our supposed hiding of Islamist loyalties.[20]
References
- ↑ Screengrab of Ed Husain's biography, but no longer available on the Quilliam Foundation website. Captured on 23/02/10. Original available at http://web.archive.org/web/20080123101606/http://www.quilliamfoundation.org/Quilliam/People.html Retrieval record available at http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://quilliamfoundation.org/Quilliam/People.html
- ↑ Screengrab of Ed Husain's biography, but no longer available on the Quilliam Foundation website. Captured on 23/02/10. Original available at http://web.archive.org/web/20080123101606/http://www.quilliamfoundation.org/Quilliam/People.html Retrieval record available at http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://quilliamfoundation.org/Quilliam/People.html
- ↑ CNN Newsroom Transcript Aired 4 May 2007, transcript accessed 23/02/10
- ↑ CNN Newsroom Transcript Aired 4 May 2007, transcript accessed 23/02/10
- ↑ CNN Newsroom Transcript Aired 4 May 2007, transcript accessed 23/02/10
- ↑ Ed Husain & Maajid Nawaaz, Putting the Record Straight, the Guardian, 9 January 2009 accessed 23/02/10
- ↑ Mehdi Hasan, 'Ed Husain versus Melanie Phillips' NewStatesman, 31 October 2009 - accessed 24/02/10
- ↑ Melanie Phillips, 'Another Brave Muslim Speaks Up', MelaniePhillips.com - accessed 24/02/10
- ↑ Ed Husain, We must stop appeasing Islamist extremism, The Daily Telegraph, 14 March 2009 - accessed 24/02/10
- ↑ Ed Husain, We must stop appeasing Islamist extremism, The Daily Telegraph, 14 March 2009 - accessed 24/02/10
- ↑ Arun Kundnani, Spooked: How Not to Prevent Violent Extremism Institute of Race Relations, October 2009, - accessed 25 November 2009
- ↑ Vikram Dodd, Government Anti-Terrorism Strategy Spies on Innocent, 16 October 2009, the Guardian - accessed 24 February 2010
- ↑ Reactions to Prevent Programme Spying on British Muslims, the Guardian, 16 October 2009 - accessed 24/02/10
- ↑ Vikram Dodd, Government Anti-Terrorism Strategy Spies on Innocent, 16 October 2009, the Guardian - accessed 24 February 2010
- ↑ Ed Husain, Where is the Muslim anger over Darfur?, The Independent, 10 August 2009
- ↑ The 400,000 figure is used by proponents of military intervention despite the fact that a panel of 12 experts convened in 2006 by the US Government Accountability Office unanimously found it least credible after evaluating six separate mortality figures. The most reliable estimate according to the panel was by a WHO-linked Belgian research lab Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) which put the mortality figure at 118,142. See: Mahmood Mamdani, Darfur: the feelgood conflict, Le Monde Diplomatique, August 2009
- ↑ Debarati Guha-Sapir, Olivier Degomme, “Darfur: Counting the Deaths; Mortality Estimates from Multiple Survey Data”, CRED, Brussels, 2005.
- ↑ Ed Husain, Where is the Muslim anger over Darfur?, The Independent, 10 August 2009
- ↑ Melanie Phillips, On the other side from civilisation, The Spectator (Blog), 30 December 2008
- ↑ Ed Husain, The personal jihad of Melanie Phillips, The Guardian, 31 October 2009