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Labour peer urged support for Tories in 2005 election

Omar Waraich

Published 30 November 2006

Exclusive: Labour's Lord Nazir Ahmed urged support for the Tories at the last general election

Labour's most prominent Muslim peer, Lord Nazir Ahmed of Rotherham, urged support for the Conservative Party during the last general election. The claim comes from Labour MP for Dewsbury, Shahid Malik, who has provided evidence to the Labour Party that Ahmed campaigned for his opponent, Sayeeda Warsi in 2005. Warsi is now the vice-chairman of the Conservative Party and a rising star of Cameron's new look A-list of black, Asian and women candidates .

Malik has passed his concerns to the Labour chief whip, Jacqui Smith, and they will also be brought to the attention of the party's National Executive Committee. The revelations could lead to the Muslim peer's expulsion from the Labour Party.

The New Statesman has discovered that among the evidence under consideration is a voice message recording, received on the phone of an aide to Sardar Attique, the prime minister of Azad Kashmir, the Pakistan-occupied part of the country, which has been the subject of a longstanding bloody dispute with India.

The message was left on the machine by Ahmed in March 2005, some time before an election rally was held in the west Yorkshire constituency under Attique's auspices.

"This is Lord Nazir speaking," the Labour peer says at the start of the recording, which the New Statesman has heard. The message is a Mirpuri dialect of Punjabi. "Phone me, I have heard that Sardar Attique is going to Dewsbury. You might know that from Labour there's Malik, Shahid, and the Conservatives have a Pakistani girl – Sayeeda Hussain Warsi. Friend, don't invite both to the rally. But if you do invite someone, then…"

Ahmed's voice trails off at this point. It picks up again a second later, and he tells the aide of a source of potential division between Attique and Malik: "Malik invited the Barrister [Sultan Mahmood, a political rival of Sardar Attique], and Malik is with him."

Before signing off, the Labour peer signals which side he believes the prime minister should lean towards. "If you invite Sayeeda's party (the Conservatives)," he says, "it will be very good."

Dewsbury boasts close to 13,000 constituents of Kashmiri extraction. Their votes were carefully courted during the campaign by both Warsi and Malik, the eventual victor. Each expressed a commitment to the promotion of Kashmiri rights throughout the campaign.

Ahmed confirmed that he made the call and left that message. But he said that his words must be appreciated within a wider context. "I told Riaz [Attique's aide] to not intervene in the British political system because he is from an Azad Kashmir political party and he should stay out of it," he says.

Ahmed added: "That tape is actually in relation to a meeting that was held in Huddersfield. And I never told any constituent of Dewsbury to vote for the Tories."

Ahmed adds that he went to Dewsbury during the election period, but only to visit family there. He also said he knew Warsi well and is known to be a friend of her father’s.

Warsi welcomed Lord Ahmed's support, but strenuously denied soliciting support for her campaign from the Labour peer .

"It is quite extraordinary," said Shahid Malik MP in response, "that a Labour peer who proudly asserts that he is the country's first Muslim peer should behave in such a divisive manner against a fellow Labour party member. Any disciplinary action to be taken against him is a matter for the Labour NEC. I will abide by their decision."

Echoing his colleague's remarks, Mohammad Sarwar, the MP for Glasgow Central condemned Ahmed's actions as "disgraceful".

In a further allegation, Malik said his fellow Labour and Muslim parliamentarian had helped bring a second Kashmiri politician to a Tory election event. "Lord Ahmed was involved in bringing the President [of Azad Kashmir] to a Conservative rally in Dewsbury during the general election campaign," he said. "The President apologised to me in front of fellow parliamentarians stating that Lord Ahmed had not told him that he would be going to Ms Warsi's rally. I accepted his apology."

Lord Ahmed denies taking the president of Azad Kashmir to any campaign event.

On the occasion of Malik's selection as the Labour prospective parliamentary candidate for Dewsbury, he and Ahmed shared a public platform in Sheffield. Ahmed congratulated Malik on his selection and wished him a successful campaign.

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5 comments from readers

swatantra nandanwar
01 December 2006 at 14:54

I do wish that Asian politicians would not bring the politics of the sub-continet onto the streets of Britain. And that people like Ahmad would promote the message of greater integration of Asian communities into Britain society. They should distance themselves from the petty factions and tribal politics of India and Pakistan, and tell their communities to do their same. Those settled here and who have British Citizenship owe their loyalty to Britain first; forget about India and Pakistan.

Raza Khan
01 December 2006 at 20:25

It is quite apparent that Shahid Malik has become extremely unpopular in the muslim community due to his divisive policies. Lord Ahmed is one of the few Labour muslim parliamentarians who still holds the respect and trust of the majority muslim community. He helps to bring communities together and facilitate better understanding. It is therefore sad to see that Mr Malik is trying to discredit the one man who can potentially keep the muslim electorate for the Labour party. Mr Malik's actions will could cost the Labour party a number of crucial seats at the next general election - not a very smart move.

RamiKhan
04 December 2006 at 18:44

What divisive policies? Malik opposed the Iraq war, opposed Israel's bombardment of Lebanon, and signed the same foreign policy letter as Lord Ahmed that kicked off such a storm this summer.

Ahmed has been proven to be divisive, if anything. He secretly campaigned against someone he said he supported. He's unprincipled and unethical.

Salim Malik
05 December 2006 at 12:40

Islam tells you to be loyal to the country you live in. Fighting Pakistan politics in England should not be permitted not should the politicians subscribe to these practices. The fact is that the poularity of Shahid Malik MP is flagging and he trying to prop himself up by such tactics. Lord Ahmad is an upright man, a man of principles and has never been afraid to speak his mind. Lord Ahmad has always tried for integration of Muslim community in the British mainstream. We need more people like Lord Ahmad to represent Muslims in the British politics. Salim Malik

swami gurupala
05 December 2007 at 03:36

Which Islam tells you to beloyal to the country you live in?

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