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Hate leaflets calling for killing of Ahmadi Muslims distributed across London
Leaflets
calling for members of the Ahmadi Muslim community to be killed have
allegedly been distributed in universities, mosques and shopping centres
in London.
Followers of the Muslim religion Ahmadiyya,
which preaches a message of peace and tolerance, have long been subject
to violent attacks and persecution in Pakistan, where they are branded
worse than apostates by hardliners and forbidden by the state to call
themselves Muslims.
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Now the wave of persecution appears to have spread to the UK, with a man admitting in a public statement that he killed Ahmadi shopkeeper Asad Shah in Glasgow for
disrespecting Islam. The unusual statement coincides with the
distribution across London of leaflets calling for followers of the
religion to be killed.
A
leaflet undersigned by the global anti-Ahmadiyya Khatme Nubuwwat
organisation in Stockwell Green, and distributed in several London
locations, has been obtained by IBTimes UK.
The group denies spreading anti-Ahmadiyya hate speech.
Entitled
"Qadianis [a pejorative name for Ahmadiyya], Difference With Other
Non-Muslims", it asks why "this group is considered wicked [sic] than
others?" and declares for Muslims "to have any kind of relation with
Qadianis is prohibited". The
hate literature goes on to describe various categories of "Kufr", or
unbeliever, and brands Ahmadiyya as "dualist infidel" or "one who is
bent upon presenting his 'Kufr' as Islam" and is "worse than an
apostate". It prescribes the same punishment that is doled out for
apostates (those who have renounced their own religion), advocating
allowing followers a three-day period to "get back into the Islamic
fold. If he does not, he is to be awarded capital punishment." The
leaflets have allegedly been distributed in several London locations
over the last few years, sources in the Ahmadiyya community told IBTimes
UK:
• In October 2012, the notices were
distributed on the campus of University College London at an event held
by the university's Ahmadiyya Students Association in response to the
controversial anti-Islam film the Innocence of Muslims. Ahmadiyya
student association members claim the leaflets were also distributed on
subsequent occasions, but university authorities say they are not aware
of this. They have also allegedly been distributed as recently as 2014
on the campuses of Kingston University and Westminster University, where
Islamic State executioner Mohammed Emwazi studied.
• The
anti-Ahmadiyya propaganda have been allegedly distributed to members of
the public in Wandsworth Road and outside Tooting Market, south London,
on several occasions in 2014 and 2015.
• They have also allegedly
been distributed outside the Khatme Nubuwwat Academy office in Forest
Gate, east London on several occasions in 2014 and 2015.
"You can
have differences of opinion, but where it leads to hate, or incitement
to violence, or promoting violence, it is unacceptable," Farooq Aftab,
vice-president of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Organisation, told IBTimes
UK.
"[These leaflets] spread misinformation and mistrust, they pave the way for hatred."
On
Thursday, 7 April, Glasgow Ahmadi community leader Ahmed Owusu-Konadu
called on all Muslims to condemen the killing of Shah. Aftab said the
message of intolerance had even spread to schools, with Ahmadi children
bullied and ostracised by their peers. He added that he had been told of
incidents in east London schools in which "kids are sitting with
friends and are told we are not going to associate with you because
you're an Ahmadi".
Aftab said that police had been informed
repeatedly about the leaflets. "I think the police are slightly
clueless, or they don't want to recognise it because there are deep
links to what is going on in Pakistan," he said.
Abdul Fariq Khan,
who ran an Ahmadiyya Students Association group at Manchester
University, said that on campuses throughout the country, members of the
Islamic Society called for Muslim students to boycott events held by
Ahmadiyya students.
"You
will always find that there has been an email or somebody important
from the society or the Muslim community of that university has said you
should never be going to this kind of event, you should never talk to
them or engage with them. And that happens very regularly and it is
across the country," Khan said.
Founded in British-controlled
northern India in the late 19th century, the Ahmadi are considered
heretical by other Muslims because they do not regard Mohammed as the
final prophet, and revere founder Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, who died in 1835,
as the saviour.
After Ahmadiyya were prohibited in Pakistan from
calling themselves Muslims in 1984, the group moved its headquarters to
Morden, south London, where it faced renewed persecution from Muslim
hardliners. In 2010, Ofcom penalised an Islamic satellite channel affiliated with Khatme Nubuwwat after it described Ahmadiyya as "liable for death".
In
an email, Khatme Nubuwwat spokesman Akber Choudhry denied all
allegations of propagating anti-Ahmadiyya hate speech. "We completely
denied these unfounded allegations then, and we deny them now," he said.
"We
believe in tolerance and the sanctity of every human life. Our work is
just to counter the propaganda of the Ahmadiyya Qadiani religion, and
their proselytisation among Muslim youth. For this work, they hate us
and try to use more propaganda.
"Muslims, as citizens of the UK,
have the right to associate with whoever they please. Muslims regard the
Qadiani Ahmadiyya as a distinct religion, so the association may be
limited by personal faith and preference," he added.
University
College London spokeswoman Ruth Howells said that after receiving a
complaint about the leaflets "University College London Union acted
immediately and the Sabbatical Officers at the time met with those
involved". She added that "the Dean of Students (Welfare) was also
advised of the situation and offered to mediate."
In a statement,
Westminster University said it was "not aware" of the leaflets, but
"would strongly condemn any attempt to incite violence against another
individual or community. Should any students be found circulating
material which incites violence, they would be subject to the
University's disciplinary procedures."
Metropolitan Police, Kingston University and the Islamic Society have not responded to requests for comment.
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