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How we can rid Britain of violent extremism

Shiraz Maher

Published 12 July 2007

Terrorism does not exist in a vacuum. What must be addressed is the political ideology of Islamism that inspires it

Following the Glasgow attacks last month, I was filled with dread about how Muslim leaders might respond. Over the past two years there has been a general tendency to condemn terrorist attacks and follow with an almost mandatory caveat linking them to British foreign policy - "If Tony Blair hadn't . . .", "If we weren't in Iraq . . ." The community response was refreshingly different this time. The vast majority of Muslim groups overwhelmingly condemned the attempted atrocities outright. No ifs, no buts.

This shift is encouraging, but does not go far enough. Since leaving radical Islam behind two years ago, I've had time to reflect on exactly what is causing the kind of anger that motivates young men - often highly intelligent and successful - to become hardened terrorists. It's a reality that came thundering home for me when I discovered that the principal suspects behind the bombing plot at the end of June were among my closest friends when I studied at Cambridge University.

Islamist terrorism does not exist in a vacuum. Like other social phenomena, it operates within a wider infrastructure, designed to achieve specific ends. In this case, that is the political ideology of Islamism, an idea distinct and different from Islam the religion. I'm convinced that if we're serious about eradicating the dangerous subculture of extremism in some parts of the Muslim community, we need to address this.

By focusing almost exclusively on violent extremism, the government has got it wrong. It has failed to appreciate how the general culture of extreme Islamist dissent can, and often does, give rise to terrorism itself.

Islamist groups thrive on preaching a separatist message of Islamic supremacy, which concerns itself with reversing the temporal decline of Islam and challenging the ascendancy of the west by reviving a puritanical caliphate. Muslims in Britain who subscribe to this belief are in effect leading separate lives. They believe Islam and the west are irreconcilable, that democracy is heresy and that the biggest threat to British Muslims is integration.

One of the principal proponents of this view in Britain is Hizb ut-Tahrir, of which I was a member and regional officer for north-east England. It was through my membership of the group that I first met Bilal Abdulla and Kafeel Ahmed, the two men suspected of driving an explosive-laden jeep into Glasgow Airport.

During that year we became close friends, and met frequently to discuss politics. The at mosphere was always highly charged when we considered the decline of political Islam. We felt humiliated by it. We all believed in championing the supremacy of Islam, wanting to see a future Islamic empire dominate the world and, of course, to establish a puritanical Islamic state.

It is within this ideological framework that Islamism operates - whether violent or not. And, contrary to conventional wisdom, terrorism is not about simple retaliation for perceived grievances. Islamist violence in the west is invariably linked with a desire to see the realisation of a world-view. This is where the campaign against violent extremism must now focus: on the ideology that inspires it.

Although groups like Hizb insist that their acti vities are merely intellectual, the movement is no paper tiger. It is an active revolutionary organisation with tentacles spread across the world. And its culpability in inspiring terrorists cannot be denied. Hizb has consistently raised the temperature of Islamist anger across Britain by issuing inflammatory leaflets aimed to agitate and provoke. One leaflet distributed at British mosques urged: "O Muslims! Hizb ut-Tahrir calls upon you to mobilise your forces to help and support it in its work to establish the [caliphate] state, by which you will restore your glory . . . and destroy your enemy . . . the enemies of Allah and His Messenger, namely America, Britain, the Jews and their allies."

Throughout the 1990s, when Islamist groups such as Hizb were able to operate with impunity, the movement succeeded in recruiting young Muslims from the Indian subcontinent to its ranks. Many of these recruits, such as Hizb's current leader in Britain, Dr Abdul Wahid, later repatriated themselves to places like Pakistan to help proliferate the movement's cells there. Hizb members are now actively working to undermine Musharraf's government.

As Islam becomes increasingly deterritorialised, we cannot afford to consider our security in isolation, nor can we make false distinctions between extremism and violent extremism. They are interdependent and inextricably intertwined.

It may be going too far to suggest that the actual plans for the London and Glasgow attacks were being laid during the academic year 2004-2005 when I knew Bilal and Kafeel. What is certain, however, is that the ideological seeds of anti-western sentiment and separatism were being sown, or at least reinforced, back then. The subsequent gap to be bridged when they eventually decided to bomb Britain was that much smaller.

But I remain optimistic. In the two years since I left radical Islamism behind, I've seen some positive change. The Muslim community is beginning to accept that the problem of extremist sentiment is principally born out of theological bifurcation, not foreign policy.

If we are serious about ridding ourselves of violent extremism, we need to be similarly unequivocal in challenging the ideological infrastructure that underlies it all - no ifs, no buts.

Shiraz Maher's film about political Islam will be broadcast on Newsnight (BBC2) next week

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6 comments from readers

RoyalDoulton
12 July 2007 at 11:10

I'm not quite clear as to what Mr Maher is advocating... does he propose that a 'thought police' interrogate muslims on their aspirations for the Muslim World?

Shiraz is right, terrorist acts don't occur within a vacuum, they happen when a nation invades and exploits other nations and is responsible for untold suffering. Would Bilal Abdulla have turned to his path if his family wasn't hounded out of Baghdad, his best friends murdered, and his homeland in ruins? Who knows? But to lay the blame at the foot of people who are advocates for the legitimate aspirations of the Muslim world is disingenuous.

There's a very real difference between those that advocate political change through conveying ideas and those that engage in violence to coerce it. To blur the line is a step towards a very slippery slope.

am
12 July 2007 at 12:33

i think shiraz should be charged by the police because he knew of these individuals who did the bombing and he did nothing. He openly says he new their believes but over the last decade even after he left so called "islamism" he never alerted the authorities about these people.

And people could have been killed.

Infact he keeps telling us about non-violent groups but the actual violent people he kept quiet about them unitl after the bombing and now he wants to cash in. Just like he's trying to cash in on his experiences of HuT.

Poeple like you are a disgrace.

Mr Shiraz how many more people do u know who are planning attacks. Or are u just going to tell us that u knew about them on newsnight after the bombings

suziq
12 July 2007 at 23:16

Thanks for the article on Islam.

I think you might want to see this site:

The Truth About Islam

http://islamwatchers.blogspot.com

sa
14 July 2007 at 00:17

I don't believe that people among Muslims or non-Muslims believe for one minute that the increased terror threat is due to the rise of political Islam as Mr Maher claims. The overwhelming majority of people recognise correctly that we are witnessing a blow back for the Iraq war and wider British foreign policy in the Islamic world. Numerous committee's and think tanks have idetified that Iraq is the cause of UK terrorism. Mr Maher's view is contrived and exploitative-he seems to have met every terrorist in the country yet never considered them to be dangerous at the time. By the same token if he himself had been radicalised how is it that he went the other way? There is no credibility in this line of argument-but rather playing politics with security

Mindful
15 July 2007 at 21:40

If his attempted PHD was as good as the articles he has written for the Newstatesman, then it is no wonder he did not receive further funding. It seems strange that it provides the same narrative as the government (certainly under blair) that seeks to distance the current problem of terrorism with British Foriegn policy. What we need is a balanced approach to tackle such a difficult situation we face. Rather we shouldnt just give air to those claiming to be former radicals (mostly it seems looking for fame and fortune) thinking they can add anything useful to the discussion when they merely bring superficiality.

dolores fitchie
27 July 2007 at 20:34

Very nice article. Very virtuous...Nothing like a Twice-Converted for sheer self-righteous arrogance ... and one sidedness!. Maher speaks of the "the ideology that inspires" violent extremism. What about the ideology that inspires the equally violent neo-cons( on both sides of the pond)? Has he ever heard about the Project for the New American Century? Or US plans for "Full Spectrum Domination"?

I find the idea of a global Islamic caliphate quite unnerving, but no worse that a globe dominated by American "culture"..., In fact an Islamic caliphate might turn out to be more rational, and even more civilized, than the psychopathic rationale of western-style turbocapitalism. Hijabs do give me the creeps but Paris Hilton definitely turns my stomach!

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