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War Of Words
Will Britain's tough new antiterror laws alienate the country's moderate Muslims? |
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Slipping Through the Net
Aspiring jihaddis can access the web for all the inspiration and support they need |
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Combatting Terror
Britain prepares for a long struggle, fighting extremism without and within |
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Living with the Bombs
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown rethinks what it means to be a British Muslim |
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Terror Next Door
After a swift and sweeping manhunt, police have the four suspected London bombers in custody. Now investigators begin to unravel the terrorist plot |
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Specialist Tactics Under Fire
The killing of an innocent Brazilian by armed police has placed attitudes and behavior under the microscope |
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London Terror
Four more bomb attempts on London transport rattle the already anxious capital, while the search for those responsible takes on global dimensions |
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E-mail your letter to the editor
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| JESS HURD / REPORTDIGITAL.CO.UK |
| ON EDGE Some see stop-and-search as a necessary evil |
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Posted Sunday, August 7, 2005; 11:34BST
London is still anxious and jumpy after the July 7 and 21 terrorist attacks. Last week, a bus on Gray's Inn Road began smoking and a huge chunk of the city center was immediately cordoned off. (It turned out to be a mechanical fault.) I saw five tube passengers flee the carriage when a young Sudanese schoolboy boarded a train. Raza, an old Muslim colleague of mine, was pushed off a bus by the conductor, who didn't like the look of his briefcase. As a British Muslim political columnist, I receive a steady torrent of ugly e-mail invective, quite a lot of it threatening my private parts — e-mail rape used in a war I don't comprehend.
Shock initially united the city. But now things are falling apart and life feels more perilous. Evidence is mounting of increased abuse of people presumed to be Muslim. Tough new antiterrorism laws are overriding fundamental civil rights and liberties, and racial profiling is now official police policy. Politicians have resumed their doublespeak, while Muslim apologists are again blaming everyone but their own communities. I worry about my son, a tall, dark, handsome barrister recently married to a beautiful English woman. Unlike me, he doesn't practice Islam and does admire Tony Blair. But physically, he looks no different from the July 7 bombers. I often find myself shaking as I imagine him inadvertently shot by tense policemen. He's uppity, proud and has a temper. I keep telling him to be pliant if stopped by the police, not to run or argue back. All the African and Asian parents in Britain are gripped by the same panic. The police do have to stop and search our men and boys. It's deeply upsetting, but this is the fate forced on us by the fanatics. To be honest, I too am nervous on public transport around males who look like members of my family or my close Asian or Arab friends. I accept this discrimination. I have to, in the interests of national security.
I don't believe there is a simple causal connection between the Iraq occupation and the London bombs. But the war has aggravated the impotent fury of millions of young Muslims. Blair is keen on censuring purveyors of a distorted Islam, but is silent about our duplicitous foreign interventions. The brightest Muslims watch news of Iraq and Guantánamo Bay and Palestine and feel rage and dislocation. This crisis should have prompted the government to examine itself, yet it has failed to do so. But self-styled Muslim leaders are also avoiding responsibility. They prefer to concentrate on the poetry of what the Koran says rather than the perfidy of what too many Muslims do. The bombers aren't really Muslim, they claim. Neat, isn't it? By this logic, there are no bad Muslims, only fanatics who misunderstand Islam.
This is why a group of us, modern democratic Muslims, have decided to start a movement. It is at an embryonic stage, but many have already come onboard. Within a few months it will be launched in Westminster. We want to break through the lies that sustain all sides in this global conflict. We want to snatch back our faith from the conservatives who have politicized and corrupted it. We want to hold the government to account. We want to redefine what it means to be a British Muslim.
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London Terror [Aug. 1, 2005]
Four more bomb attempts on London transport rattle the already anxious capital, while the search for those responsible takes on global dimensions
Becoming A Bomber [Aug. 1, 2005]
Investigators in Pakistan explore possible radicalizing influences
Hate Around The Coner [July 25, 2005]
Investigators blame the attacks on four homegrown suicide bombers — and look for global links to al-Qaeda
In Both Sorrow and Anger [July 25, 2005]
British Muslims start to talk about the London bombs — and the radicalism that produced them
The Hardest Count [July 25, 2005]
How do you indentify the victims of a suicide bomber?
7 Days Later [July 14, 2005]
Scenes from Britain after the suicide attacks
TIMEeurope.com Series Of Explosions In London [July 7, 2005]
Dozens die as terrorists hit Britain's capital in the crowded rush hour
TIME.com Back to Work [July 8, 2005]
TIME's staffers give first-person accounts of their morning journey as Londoners return to their commute the day after a deadly attack
Photoessay Rush Hour Terror [July 18, 2005]
After a strike in the heart of London, suspicion again falls on Islamic radicals. Inside the hunt for the bombers
3 Lessons from London [July 18, 2005]
As investigators unravel the plot, here's what the attacks reveal about how al-Qaeda operates today — and why the bombings may be a sign of things to come
Photoessay A New Blitz [July 7, 2005]
Four explosions in London rip apart a bus and shut down the entire transport system
Photoessay Eyewitness [July 8, 2005]
Personal Cameras and cellphones record the terror of the day
Photoessay London Carnage [July 8, 2005]
Dozens killed by rush-hour terror strikes
Photoessay London Mourning [July 8, 2005]
Shock and sadness follows a wave of terror
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