Islamic
extremists have turned parts of Britain into no-go areas for non-Muslims, a
Church of England bishop claims. The charge by the Right Reverend Michael Nazir-Ali infuriated Islamic
groups, who accused him yesterday of whipping up hatred against Muslims. The
bishop's remarks also triggered a wave of arguments among political leaders
over the spread of religious separatism and the damage caused by the Left-wing
doctrine of multiculturalism.
The bishop is one of the most senior clergymen in England, pictured here with the Queen |
Dr Nazir-Ali, the Bishop of Rochester
and a senior Anglican who has advised the Prince of Wales on Islam, said it had
become hard for those who are not Muslims to live or work in some areas. He
warned against the acceptance in this country of Sharia laws based on the Koran
and added that amplified calls to prayer from mosques are imposing an Islamic
character on surrounding areas.
And he complained of the
"multi-faith mish-mash" promoted by the Government and blamed it for
undermining the influence of Christianity. The bishop's attack on aggressive
Islamic leaders brought condemnation from prominent Muslim groups. One called
for the Church of England to take "serious action" against him.
But Shadow Home Secretary David Davis
said the bishop had exposed "a deeply serious problem".He added that
Government confusion "risks encouraging radicalism and creating home-grown
terrorism".
Dr Nazir-Ali, who grew up in Pakistan
where he suffered harassment for his own Christian faith, warned of no-go areas
in an article in the Sunday Telegraph.
He spoke of "a worldwide
resurgence of the ideology of Islamic extremism" and added: "One of
the results of this has been to further alienate the young from the nation in
which they were growing up and also to turn already separate communities into
'no-go' areas where adherence to this ideology has become a mark of
acceptability."
The bishop added: "Those of a
different faith or race may find it difficult to live or work there because of
hostility to them. In many ways, this is the other side of the coin of
far-Right intimidation."Dr Nazir-Ali said that using amplification for the
call to prayer from mosques was an attempt to impose Islam on an area. This, he
said, raised the question of "whether non-Muslims wish to be told the
creed of a particular faith five times a day on the loudspeaker.
"This is happening here even
though some Muslim-majority communities are trying to reduce noise levels from
multiple mosques announcing this call, one after the other, over quite a small
geographical area." The bishop said that the influence of Christianity was
in decline because "the authorities want multi-faith provision",
which meant chapels and chaplains in hospitals, prisons and universities were
now under threat. Secularism and the "multi-faith mish-mash" were
pushing out Christianity - and Government attempts to encourage integration
"lack the underpinning of a moral and spiritual vision".
The charges brought an angry response
from the Muslim Council of Britain, the Islamic umbrella group which has come
back into favour with the Government since Gordon Brown became Prime Minister. Assistant
Secretary-General Inayat Bunglawala said the Government had contributed to the
rise of Islamic extremism and compared the Islamic call to prayer with church
bells.
'He talks about the rise of
"Islamic extremism" but fails to mention how some of the policies of
our government and especially that of the United States in the Middle East over
several decades now has clearly contributed to this phenomenon.
"He complains of the Islamic call
to prayer but presumably is content for all of us to listen to the ringing of
church bells. As Jesus himself advised, perhaps the good bishop may want to
examine the beam in his own eye before pointing fingers at others."
Mohammed Shafiq, of the Muslim youth
group the Ramadhan Foundation, accused Dr Nazir-Ali of attempting to "whip
up hatred" against Muslims. The article would "remind people of the
road to Nazism", he said.
A spokesman for the Communities and
Local Government Department said: "The overwhelming majority of Muslims
are peaceful, make a huge contribution to British life and find the views of a
small minority of violent extremists completely abhorrent.
"Britain also has a proud
tradition of different communities living together side by side."
The Bishop's attack on Islamic
extremism has cemented his place as one of the Church of England's pre-eminent
defenders of traditional Christianity. Michael Nazir-Ali's outspokenness has
put him at the vanguard of opposition to hard-line Islamism and made him one of
the highest-placed enemies of the gay rights movement.
Born into a Roman Catholic family,
Michael Nazir-Ali converted to Anglicanism aged 20. The 58-year-old father of
two has set himself against feminism by criticising couples who decline to have
children and he is among the clerics who speak most strongly against attempts
to remove signs of Christianity from public life.