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Still
no arrests of the organisers of this Muslim demo' yet local Whites are
arrested for opposing them.
Anjem
Choudary has praised the Muslim anti-war protesters while hate preacher
Omar Bakri has said he feels pride at their demonstration
Muslim hate preacher ridicules
troops abused in anti-war protests - and mocks their dead comrade
A Muslim preacher of hate today
ridiculed British soldiers who were abused during a homecoming parade -
branding them cowards who have an 'uncanny knack for death by friendly
fire'.
Firebrand preacher Anjem Choudary
praised the Muslims who had protested at yesterday's parade for the 2nd
Battalion Royal Anglian Regiment in Luton.
And in an inflammatory message
posted on an Islamic extremist website, Choudary viciously mocked their
comrade who was killed by friendly fire in Iraq.
His
words came as police charged a man who allegedly shouted abuse at the
Muslim anti-war protesters.
Choudary, who has links with
banned Muslim cleric Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed, likened the soldiers
to Nazis and branded yesterday's homecoming a 'vile parade' of 'brutal
murderers'.
Choudary said: 'On 10th March
2009 200 pathetic and cowardly British soldiers from the second
battalion, of the Royal Anglian Regiment, pompously marched through
Luton to demonstrate their skill at murdering and torturing thousands
of innocent Muslim men, women and children (in Iraq) over a 24-month
period.'
Choudary leads the controversial
Islam For The UK organisation which wants Britain to be an Islamic
state, ruled by Sharia law.
His group was formed after
Bakri's fundamentalist organisation Al-Muhajiroun was banned by the
Government.
He said: 'Non-Muslims in Britain
must appreciate that the actions of the British soldiers must be
condemned unreservedly; they are not heroes but closer to cowards who
cannot fight, as their uncanny knack for death by 'friendly fire'
illustrates.'
His cruel comments were clearly
designed to mock the memory of Private Darren George, 23, from
Pirbright, Surrey, who was accidentally shot by a colleague in Kabul on
April 9, 2002.
Today it was revealed that
yesterday's shocking scenes were likely to have been organised by an
extremist group directly linked to Bakri Mohammed.
Within hours of the march ending
the London School of Sharia had posted a message in support on its
website.
The group is led by Bakri, the
'Tottenham Ayotollah', who now preaches to his followers from Lebanon
via videos posted on websites after he was barred from Britain.
Bakri, 51, today said he felt
'proud' of the Luton protesters but denied any involvement in
organising the demonstration.
The preacher, speaking from
the Lebanon, said: 'My brothers from Luton were protesting against
people they see as killers of Muslims in Iraq - including women and
children'
But one Muslim community leader
today condemned the extremists.
Akbar Dad Khan, of Building
Bridges in the town, said: 'They are about 10 to 15 hotheads. The best
thing to do is just to ignore them. They do not represent the views of
the community. They are a small hotch-potch of hot heads.
'They love the attention and the
media should not give them the time of day. The vast majority of the
Muslim population in Luton - like elsewhere - want to live peacefully
and get on with their lives.'
'Many people from all backgrounds
opposed the Iraq war but there are proper ways to conduct yourself,' he
added.
One protester at yesterday's
rally, Sayful Islam, the leader of the Luton branch of an organisation
that has the same beliefs as al-Muhajiroun, was unrepentant today.
He said: 'The anger has been
rising. The parade was the final insult. They have killed, maimed and
raped thousands of innocent people. They can't come here and parade
where there is such a Muslim community.'
Last month members of the same
group were seen at an anti-Israel demonstration in the Bedfordshire
town.
In his internet posting, Anjem
Choudary said that the British soldiers were 'terrorists'.
He said: 'They cannot be excused
for simply 'carrying out their duty', which incidentally (and vividly)
was also used by Nazi soldiers in Germany to justify their notorious
and bloody campaigns in the early 20th century.'
Police closely monitor the anti-Army
group as the 200-strong regiment passes through Luton town centre
Yesterday the 200 troops were
faced with the hate-filled jeers of anti-war protesters waving placards
saying: ‘Anglian soldiers: Butchers of Basra,’ and ‘Anglian soldiers:
cowards, killers, extremists.’
Police
were already out in force to protect the anti-war group and arrested
two men among the soldiers’ supporters.
Last night the mother of David
Hicks, a captain with the Royal Anglian Regiment who was killed in
Afghanistan in August 2007, called the protests ‘extremely
distressing’.
‘I felt very saddened and
extremely upset,’ said Mrs Hicks, of Wokingham, Berkshire. ‘I also feel
a little angry. I think every mother or father who has lost somebody in
Afghanistan or Iraq would feel very difficult about this.
‘It’s very easy to tarnish all
the Muslim community with the same brush, but I do wonder, if the
roles were reversed, if such a protest would be allowed in a Muslim
country.’
Gordon Brown condemned the
protests and ministers and senior politicians branded the demonstration
‘insulting’ and ‘sordid.’
Shadow Secretary of State for
Defence Dr Liam Fox said: ‘This is offensive, appalling and
disgraceful.
Elsewhere along the route hundreds of
townsfolk turned out to clap and cheer on the soldiers
Tempers flared as pro-Army supporters
took offence at the small protest and police were forced to separate
the groups
'It is only because of the
sacrifices made by our armed forces that these people live in a free
society where they are able to make their sordid protests.’
<
style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Luton South Labour
MP Margaret Moran called for an inquiry into the way police handled the
incident. She said: ‘Calling people baby-killers and the rest seems to
amount to provocation of the worst kind when these lads and lasses have
risked their lives for the freedom these people enjoy. It seems to me
this amounted to huge provocation and was potentially racially
divisive.’ >
But the Muslim protesters were
unrepentant. Teacher Sayful Islam, self-styled leader of the Luton
branch of al-Muhajiroun – the now-banned radical organisation led by
Sheikh Omar Bakri – said: ‘The anger has been rising. The parade was
the final insult.
‘They have killed, maimed and
raped thousands of innocent people. They can’t come here and parade
where there is such a Muslim community. What do they have to be proud
of?’
The battalion is based in
Germany, but Bedfordshire is one of the areas where it recruits, along
with neighbouring Hertfordshire and Northamptonshire.
Trouble flared as the soldiers
marched to a meeting with the Duke of Gloucester, the regiment’s
colonel-in-chief, and local dignitaries.
He said:' The anger has been
rising up. The parade was the final insult.
'They have killed, maimed and
raped thousands of innocent people. They can't come here and parade
where there is such a Muslim community. What do they have to be proud
of?'
Leaflets urging Muslims to
demonstrate against the soldiers' homecoming had been distributed
around Luton earlier in the week.
Under the headline 'Criminals' it
railed against the troops' 'audacity' at marching though the town
centre and accused them of having 'blood on their hands.'
It read 'Muhammad said :"He among
you who sees a munkar (evil) should change it with his hand. If he can
not do that , then with his tongue (by speaking out against it)".'
It finished with the words:' We
urge the Muslims of Luton not to stay silent against these murderers of
Muslim men, women and children and to do what we as Muslims have been
obliged to do and speak against an open evil.'
Police had penned the protesters into a
small area and two lines of officers separated them from a large number
of local people, waving Union and St George’s flags. At one point a man
climbed onto a roof and threw a packet of bacon at the Muslim group.
Bedfordshire police said the
Muslim protesters were later ‘escorted from the area to a safe place to
disperse’.
The force said last night:
‘Everything that went on will be examined and if any offences have been
committed then we will arrest them.’
An Army spokesman said the
battalion, which is due to take part in a similar march in Watford
today, was ‘deeply touched’ by the strong support shown by the people
of Luton.
He said: ‘There is no better
boost to a soldier than to see hundreds of people turn out to watch
them on parade.'
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