Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK
- This article is about the British organization. For the U.S. organization, see Muslim Public Affairs Council
The Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK (MPACUK) is a not-for-profit British Muslim organization set up to address Islamaphobia within Britain and the loss of liberties here in the UK & around the world. The group campaigns on issues affecting Britain's Muslim population primarily through electoral campaigns and media appearances.
It has attracted both praise and criticism for its views in favour of Muslim mainstream political participation, mosque reform and women's rights, and for its belief in a link between foreign policy and terrorism. It has also attracted criticism for its strong anti-Israel stance. While it is not considered an extremist organisation, the organisation was described by Jack Straw as 'most egregious' after it had actively campaigned for Muslims in his Blackburn constituency to vote tactically against him in the 2005 General Election, a Channel 4 Documentary captured their campaign against Jack Straw and followed them on their trail to unseat them [1]
Aims and policies
MPACUK encourages Muslim participation in the mainstream British political process and has no political affiliation; in particular it encourages Muslims to participate in tactical voting against MPs who support policies which it considers not to be in Muslims' interest. This can extend both to national issues such as civil liberties, Islamophobia and anti-terror legislation; and to foreign policy, including the 2003 invasion of Iraq or Israeli action in the Palestinian territories and Lebanon. It condemns Islamic extremists such as Omar Bakri Mohammed, and has criticised radical Islamist groups such as Hizb ut-Tahrir which reject Muslim participation in Western politics.
Alleged Antisemitism
MPACUK has attracted criticism for alleged antisemitism. In September 2006 the Report of the All-Party Parliamentary Inquiry into Antisemitism[2] observed that MPACUK had been criticised by the CST for promoting the idea of a worldwide Zionist conspiracy and using material taken from neo-Nazi, white nationalist, and Holocaust denial websites. The report also notes the CST's assertion that "[t]he use of ‘Zionist’ as a replacement for ‘Jewish’ is common on the MPACUK website" and that MPACUK has articulated antisemitic conspiracy theories through the language of anti-Zionism.
NUS Campus Ban
MPACUK, with Al-Muhajiroun and Hizb-ut-Tahrir, was the subject of a no-platform order by the National Union of Students in 2004, because of its alleged publication of antisemitic conspiracy theories and inciteful racist material, and further material on its website encouraging activists to break the law.[3]
Lorna Fitzsimons Controversy
Labour MP Lorna Fitzsimons became the target of an MPACUK campaign when she stood for re-election at the 2005 General Election in the constituency of Rochdale, which has a significant Muslim population. The All-Party Parliamentary Report noted with concern MPACUK's campaign against Lorna Fitzsimons and that leaflets had been printed by MPACUK, which claimed that Fitzsimons had done nothing to help the Palestinians because she was a Jewish member of the Labour Friends of Israel.[2] Fitzsimons, who was a member of the Labour Friends of Israel, is not in fact Jewish.[4] MPACUK later apologised for the inaccurate description.[2]
David Irving Controversy
- See Asghar Bukhari Controversy article
In a November 2006 article,[5] The Observer reported that in 2000 Bukhari (who would later found MPACUK) had written to David Irving, offering him support and sending him a £60 donation. At the time Irving was engaged in a libel action in England against Deborah Lipstadt who had accused him of being a Holocaust denier, which she successfully defended. In 2006, Irving was convicted and jailed in Austria for holocaust denial, a criminal offence in that country. In an interview broadcast on the MPACUK website in response to the article, Bukhari said of his earlier correspondence: "David Irving claimed he was not antisemitic and was in fact being attacked by the powerful pro-Israeli lobby; in short, being smeared ... I believed him, it's as simple as that ... I would not have supported anyone who is antisemitic."[6] Bukhari told The Observer: "I condemn antisemitism as strongly as I condemn Zionism (in my opinion they are both racist ideologies). I also believe that anyone who denies the Holocaust is wrong (I don't think they should be put behind bars for it though)."
2008 Facebook controversy
In a 2008 Facebook thread Bukhari said: "Muslims who fight against the occupation of their lands are 'Mujahadeen' and are blessed by Allah. And any Muslim who fights and dies against Israel and dies is a martyr and will be granted paradise ... There is no greater oppressor on this earth than the Zionists, who murder little children for sport." He later added: "Any public attack on Islam and the Ummah is not going to be tolerated by men like me. I have dealt with these Zionists before, a veneer of reason, below which lies a crooked mind plotting and planning to extend their hatred against us."
Bukhari also felt the people of Israel to be "the most blood thirsty and violent people on earth." He asked not to apologise for Jihadists anymore, which he feels is a racist term. The British Centre for Social Cohesion has passed his comments onto the police and called into question the media outlets' use of MPAC UK and their portrayal of it as a mainstream Muslim organization.[7][8] When asked by Daily Telegraph journalist Damian Thompson for comment, Bukhari confirmed these stances, adding "I stand by that, and I think any Muslim in the world stands by that."[9]
Notes
- ^ http://www.mpacuk.org/content/view/2017/1/.
- ^ a b c Report of the All-Party Parliamentary Inquiry Into Antisemitism, All-Party Parliamentary Group against Anti-Semitism, 7 September 2006
- ^ Motion 118: Welfare, Minutes of NUS Annual Conference, 29-31 March 2004
- ^ Ben Morris, BICOM's new CEO, SomethingJewish.co.uk
- ^ Jamie Doward, Muslim leader sent funds to Irving, The Observer, 19 November 2006
- ^ "Asghar Bukhari and The David Irving Smear Campaign", MPACUK audiocast, November 20, 2006.
- ^ Think tank: Muslim group spokesman praised terror, Jonny Paul, Jerusalem Post, Dec 21, 2008
- ^ Any Muslim killed fighting Israel goes to paradise, says MPAC spokesman, Damian Thompson, Daily Telegraph, Dec 19, 2008
Further reading
- Official Website
- "The Root of Violence", an interview with Asghar Bukhari, CBS News, August 11, 2006.
- MPACUK-produced video
- The MPAC Fiasco!
- CST (Community Services Trust) Official Website
- 2002 establishments
- Political pressure groups of the United Kingdom
- Religious activism
- Anti-Zionism
- Religious organisations based in the United Kingdom
- Civic and political organizations
- Political organizations
- British Islamic organizations
- Islamic political websites
- Islamic activist organizations
- Islam and antisemitism
- Islamist groups