Is Is
Is Is
Is Is
Alison Pargeter*
Abstract
The massacre of 38 tourists on a beach in Sousse on 26 June 2015 sent shockwaves
around Europe, bringing the threat of militant groups operating in North Africa ever
closer to home. However, given that the majority of the dead were British, the atrocity
had a special resonance in the United Kingdom, stoking fears of a possible ISIS attack
on British soil. The massacre also prompted renewed questions about Britain’s own
Muslim communities and provoked an outpouring of anti-Muslim sentiment in some parts
of the British media, reflecting a general growing unease in the UK about its Muslim
population. Indeed, the emergence of ISIS has been accompanied by a tangible rise in
anti-Muslim prejudice in the UK, with Muslims being called upon to come forward and
condemn extremism as though they are somehow guilty by association of their faith
alone. However, it is at the policy level that the response to the growth of ISIS is
perhaps most concerning. New counter terrorism legislation introduced by the British
government in 2015 has brought in invasive new surveillance measures across Britain’s
public sector, injecting a suspicion about Muslims into every part of public life. All this is
serving to make many Muslims in the UK feel increasingly as though they are a
community under siege.
Introduction
The massacre of 38 tourists, the majority of them British, on a beach in Sousse on 26
June 2015 sent shockwaves around Europe. Although the presence of militant elements
in North Africa, including those linked to ISIS, had long been an issue of concern in
many European capitals, this attack was on a whole new scale and for the British at least
brought the dangers even closer to home. News that the gunman had trained in Libya
also highlighted ongoing concerns about the growth of an ISIS presence there, fuelling
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fears that North Africa could serve as ISIS’s gateway to Europe. For many in Europe,
therefore, ISIS had never felt so close or so threatening.
While the initial reaction in the British media to the Tunisia attacks was to focus on the
details of the massacre itself, it was not long before things turned inwards to Britain’s
own Muslim population and inevitably to fears of the extremism ‘lurking within’. Some of
the commentary was shrill in its anti-Muslim sentiment. Three days after the attacks,
British columnist Leo McKinstry accused “all too many Muslims” in Europe of supporting
the “theocratic goals” of groups like ISIS, al-Qaeda and Boko Haram and of yearning for
“the triumph of their creed.”(1) He warned too of the consequences of uncontrolled
immigration and soaring birth rates among Britain’s Muslims, too many of whom, he
attested, had failed to integrate, accusing Britain’s authorities of allowing the import of
“alien obscenities” such as the burka, sharia courts, tribal corruption and “the systematic
abuse of white girls.”(2) Indeed, McKinstry’s analysis linked not only the twin bogeymen
of Islamist militancy and uncontrolled migration, but also issues of integration with
terrorism. While a lack of integration may well contribute to feelings of marginalisation,
which in turn can fuel radicalisation, simplifying such complex issues is hardly helpful in
understanding why a minority of young Muslims turn to violence.
Yet this kind of commentary is indicative of a deeply concerning trend developing in the
UK in which it is becoming increasingly acceptable to talk about Muslims in disparaging
terms. Well-known commentator Matthew Parris has observed, “Something dangerous is
brewing beneath the surface in our country…. I hadn’t expected to live to see a powerful
generalised antipathy against any race or religion gather popular force here without
stirring at least the more liberal of my fellow citizens into resistance.”(3) Parris also
recounts how some of his newspaper columns have elicited views that are “hateful
towards Muslims, all Muslims, and hateful towards those of us who don’t share the
antipathy.”(4) Although the Internet and social networking sites have long provided
space for vile abuse of all kinds, these fora have provided particular outlets for
individuals to express anti-Muslim prejudice.
The ready expression of such sentiment reflects a more generalised sense of unease
about Muslims in Britain that has accompanied the rise of ISIS in the Middle East and
North Africa. Just days before the Sousse attacks a poll of 6,640 people in the UK carried
out by YouGov asked which three words or phrases respondents most associated with
the term ‘Muslim’. Shockingly, 12% chose “terror/terrorist/terrorism”, coming ahead of
all other terms including mosque (9%) and Quran (8%).(5)
This poll came on the back of another recent survey which found that 57% of non-
Muslims believed that Muslims were not doing enough to integrate into British society.(6)
It also found that one third of Muslims felt they had experienced greater hostility and
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believed they were under greater suspicion in the last few years, while 44% of non-
Muslims reported being more wary of Muslims. Another YouGov poll found that out of
1,641 British adults surveyed, 55% believed there was a “fundamental clash between
Islam and the values of British society.”(7)
What is perhaps more concerning about all this is that this growing sense of anti-Muslim
prejudice is being reinforced at the political level where Muslim communities are
increasingly being treated as a security issue. In particular, there have been growing
calls on Muslims in the UK to speak up and speak out against terrorism as if they have a
particular responsibility to do so by virtue of their faith alone. British Prime Minister
David Cameron told British Muslims in the aftermath of the Tunisian attacks, "these
people are taking your religion of peace and they are perverting it. And that’s the reason
for standing up and saying ‘you must not do this. This is not what we believe, this is not
what we’re about’.”(11) His sentiments have been echoed by the media with The
Telegraph demanding, “This poisonous ideology has to be denounced at every turn – in
schools, in the home and in the mosques.”(12) Such calls have left many Muslims feeling
as though they are a community under siege, relentlessly having to defend themselves
and their faith against atrocities that have nothing to do with them and that have in
most cases been committed thousands of miles away.
Yet the British government has taken things even further. If Muslims were not already
being made to feel as though they are some kind of fifth column - terminology employed
by some far right French officials about Muslims in France following the Charlie Hebdo
attacks - then the UK government’s latest anti-terrorism legislation will surely make
them feel as such. The 2015 Counter Terrorism and Security Act not only gives the UK
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the right to seize travel documents and issue temporary exclusion orders, it also
legalises invasive mass surveillance measures unprecedented in peacetime.
What is especially astonishing about this Act, however, is that the duty to prevent
radicalisation extends not only to schools but to nursery and pre-school settings as well.
The idea that nursery workers across the UK are to be trained to spot signs of
radicalisation in children as young as two is absurd to say the least. Equally ridiculous is
the fact that the list of organisations is so detailed it even places a statutory duty to
prevent radicalisation on providers of “disabled holiday schemes.” Indeed, the Act has
the feel of the kind of draconian surveillance regime dreamed up by a police state rather
than a democracy.
Unsurprisingly, this law has provoked an angry response among some of the sectors
expected to comply. Hundreds of university professors issued a statement expressing
concern that the “unnecessary and ill-conceived” bill would place “an unlawful and
unenforceable duty on educational institutions and staff” and risked compromising
academic freedom.(14) Even Eliza Manningham Buller, the former head of British
intelligence agency MI5, said she was unable to back the terror measures on the
grounds that they were potentially in conflict with universities’ existing obligations to
protect free speech.(15)
Furthermore, it is not clear how such legislation is to be implemented. Although the Act
calls for training to be given, how one should expect pressurised frontline staff, most of
whom have no knowledge or understanding of Islam let alone more militant
interpretations of it, to spot when an individual is becoming radicalised is unclear. The
problems of implementation were certainly apparent when Education Secretary Nicky
Morgan was asked to give an example of a sign that a pupil was being radicalised.
Morgan, who initially voted against gay marriage herself, responded by stating that
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making homophobic comments could be an indication of such.(16) The ludicrousness of
her comments highlights the very real difficulties of this law and raise serious questions
about its potential effectiveness.
Beyond this, and the erosion of civil liberties that this Act entails, the government’s
approach is problematic for a host of reasons. Firstly, it forces those working in the very
public institutions that should form the glue of community life to take on a policing and
surveillance role. Secondly, the Act risks stifling free speech and debate in the very
places they are most needed. To make young Muslims afraid to express views and ask
questions about ISIS, British foreign policy or what the Act refers to as “British values”
for fear of being construed as extremist would be a travesty of the principles that are
meant to underpin the British education system.
Most important of all, however, this Act risks further stigmatising and alienating Muslims.
It implicitly treats Muslims as though they are a separate community, different to
everyone else, and requiring special and particular monitoring. Indeed, it injects a basic
suspicion about Muslims into every part of public life. As one commentator describes,
“Making Muslims feel like a fifth column, a potential enemy within, from childhood
onwards: this is guaranteed to make British Muslims feel even more besieged and
defensive.”(17) It also treats Muslims in the UK as if they are a monolithic unit and a
single community which is inherently extreme.
Conclusion
The irony of all this is that fostering such differences and feeling of alienation among
British Muslims risks playing straight into the hands of groups like ISIS. Rather than
making Muslims feel as though they are a community apart and under siege, a more
robust response to the challenges of terrorism would surely be to emphasise what we
have in common: the shared values that are human values rather than those labelled as
‘British’ or ‘Muslim’.
Copyright © 2015 Al Jazeera Centre for Studies, All rights reserved.
*Alison Pargeter is a Senior Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in London. She is
a specialist in North Africa and political Islamist movements and author of several books including ‘Libya: The
Rise and Fall of Gaddafi (2012).
References
(1) Leo McKinstry. "Time to Face the Extremism Taking Hold in Britain." The Daily Express. 29 June 2015.
http://www.express.co.uk/comment/columnists/leo-mckinstry/587467/Leo-McKinstry-extremism-
Britain.
(2) Ibid. N.B. McKinstry’s last comment refers to the cases of a number of sex trafficking gangs in
Rochdale and Rotherham.
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(3) Matthew Parris. "Anti-Muslim prejudice is real, and it’s scary." The Spectator. 21 March 2015.
http://www.spectator.co.uk/columnists/matthew-parris/9472722/anti-muslim-prejudice-is-real-and-
its-scary/.
(4) Ibid.
(6) A third of Muslims say they feel under greater suspicion in the last few years, survey shows. The
Independent. 10 April 2015.
(8) Remona Aly. "British Muslims shouldn’t feel obliged to speak out against IS atrocities." The Guardian.
19 September 2014. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/sep/19/british-muslims-
speak-out-IS-atrocities-prejudice.
(9) Hassina Mechaï. "France sees rise in Islamophobic attacks post Charlie Hebdo: Report." Middle East
Eye. 7 July 2015. http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/france-sees-surge-islamophobic-attacks-after-
charlie-hebdo-report-1496714716#sthash.EkoUNHuV.Wbv3al2p.dpuf.
(10) Philppa Stewart. " British Muslims suffer Islamophobic ‘retribution’ for IS attacks." Middle East Eye. 8
July 2015. http://www.middleeasteye.net/in-depth/features/british-muslims-suffer-islamophobic-
retribution-attacks-1696603779#sthash.J8JIC6AZ.dpuf.
(11) Peter Dominiczak, Gordon Rayner and Ben Farmer. "Tunisia attack: David Cameron calls on UK
Muslims to act if they suspect someone of being an extremist." The Telegraph. 29 June 2015.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/tunisia/11707126/Tunisia-attack-
David-Cameron-calls-on-UK-Muslims-to-act-if-they-suspect-someone-of-being-an-extremist.html.
(14) "Counter-terrorism and security bill is a threat to freedom of speech at universities." The Guardian. 2
February 2015. http://www.theguardian.com/education/2015/feb/02/counter-terrorism-security-bill-
threat-freedom-of-speech-universities.
(15) David Barrett. "Former spy chief says new terror measures jeopardise free speech."The Telegraph. 30
January 2015. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/terrorism-in-the-uk/11380402/Former-spy-
chief-says-new-terror-measures-jeopardise-free-speech.html .
(16) "Nicky Morgan says homophobia may be sign of extremism." BBC News. 30 June 2015.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-33325654.
(17) Owen Jones. "Government Policy Will Seal the Mouths of Muslim Pupils." The Guardian. 1 July 2015.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/01/muslim-children-enemy-radicalisation.