[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

British "Lord" Ahmed, Calls for Investigation to Exonerate



Muslims
Sender: owner-india_policy@cinenet.net
Precedence: bulk
Reply-To: debate@indiapolicy.org

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Please help make the Manifesto better, or accept it, and propagate it!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
BBC

Thursday, 4 January, 2001, 16:48 GMT
Muslims call for 'holy war' investigation



A Briton has been blamed for a bombing in Kashmir

The Muslim peer Lord Ahmed of Rotherham has called for an investigation
into
the alleged recruitment of young British Muslims to fight in so-called
holy
wars.
Lord Ahmed said the investigation was needed to get to the truth of
reports
that Muslims from Britain have been recruited to fight in places as
Chechnya, Palestine and Kashmir.

"For Muslims' sakes we need to have an investigation really to establish
the
facts," he said.

The call comes in the wake of claims that a Muslim from Birmingham was
responsible for a suicide bombing in Indian-administered Kashmir last
month.



Omar Bakri Mohammed's claims are disputed by Kashmiris in Birmingham


India and Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir since 1947 and more

than 30,000 people have died in the 12 years since separatist groups
began
their campaign.

The Islamic militant group claiming to be behind last month's attack on
an
Indian army barrack named the bomber as 24-year-old Bilal Ahmed, a
British
Muslim from Birmingham.

The bomb blast was so powerful that nothing was left of the bomber's
body
and officials have yet to confirm his identity.

'Rent-a-quote'


But the claim the bomber came from Birmingham has been supported by the
founder of a London-based Muslim group, Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed.

He added that up to 2,000 British Muslims are currently fighting in wars

overseas.



Lord Ahmed: "We need to establish the facts"

But Lord Ahmed dismissed Sheik Bakri as a "rent-a-quote" and said the
number
of British Muslims involved was nowhere as high as 2,000.

"There are many disenfranchised young people born and brought up in this

country who do take part in criminal activities but this doesn't mean
the
whole community should be blamed and given this label that they are all
involved in Jihad and holy wars," he said.

Members of Birmingham's Kashmiri community have denied that any Muslim
from
the city was involved in the Sringar bombing.

A spokesman for one leading Kashmiri group in the city, Mohhammed Galeb,

said he gave absolutely no credence to the story.

"Nobody has come to me and said anyone has been killed.

"It seems to me that there is nothing in this story but it is damaging
the
cause and encouraging the youth," he said.






--------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the National Debate on System Reform.       debate@indiapolicy.org
Rules, Procedures, Archives:            ../debate/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------