Monday, 18 September 2017

Confusing Terrorism with Extremism

The Guardian Editorial view on Theresa May’s plans on terror.
Mrs May wants us to believe that we face a threat from doctrines that do not espouse violence but somehow mutate into terror. Confusing extremism with terrorism risks dividing us as a people when we need to be united.

TM focuses on policing thoughts rather than acts, and countering ideology rather than terrorism. Penalising people for holding unspoken beliefs would end up with a legal minefield of dogma and piety. Will animal rights, ecological defence or anti-arms-trade activists (who do not subscribe to violent belief systems when criminal acts – sometimes amounting to terror – have been carried out in their name) be banned too?

Non-violent extremism is difficult to define. Banning so-called adherents from public positions would hinder, not help, the fight against terrorism, when we need to exploit every possible avenue to prevent it. This includes cooperation with the very people who might be best placed as discouragers of terrorism: those who hold similar “extremist” beliefs but who are non-violent and are opposed to the methods of violence. Mrs May’s plans criminalise the eyes and ears you need to spot terror.
We need unity. The three recent terror attacks were immediately linked to a “single evil ideology of Islamist extremism”; politicians should take care in the language they use. We should not play into the hands of al-Qaida and Islamic State and lump together murderers and peaceful Muslims who are simply observant rather than violent. Crude Islamophobia risks pulling people apart when they need to come together.

It seems we have learned nothing from our own history. In October 1974, people were killed and injured within a week of a general election. A few months later MPs voted for the Prevention of Terrorism Act, with emergency “temporary” powers so draconian they have to be renewed yearly. These crisis measures became permanent. Terrorism aims to scare us into changing the nature of our democracy; sweeping new measures with alacrity in response to terrorist acts is no way to proceed. Politicians should steer public sentiment on matters of national security but with reasoned debate.


Theresa May’s talk about British values puts all Muslims under suspicion by Myriam François

Mrs May’s recent  statement following the London Bridge attack, condemned “evil ideology of Islamist extremism” and set out a familiar action plan. But terrorists’ stated motivations focus on more tangible goals - a response to Britain’s “transgressions against the lands of the Muslims”, a victory against “the crusaders” of the west, and a response to airstrikes in Iraq; their primary motivation has always been to create a pseudo “Islamic state” in the Middle East.

Without suggesting abandoning territorial fightback against Isis, we must recognise that the fate of European capitals is tied up with a very real war in the Middle East. British foreign policy, whether or not you agree with it, impacts on British society, with the marginalised, the angry, the alienated; those looking for a higher cause to bring meaning to an often dead-end existence.

The intelligence services are clear that while they have thwarted many attacks, they won’t be able to stop all of them. It is a false idea that the real problem is a set of ideas pushed by the Muslim community. Intelligence analysts highlight that families – let alone “the community” – are often the last to know, and when they have had suspicions, recent cases show that families and mosques have approached the authorities. Communities work, and will continue to work, with the police to stop those who wish to harm us all.

This relationship of trust and cooperation is made harder, not easier, when the government casts a wide net of suspicion over the entire Muslim community, suggesting that it is a suspect group that needs to be re-educated with a predetermined set of ethics. The truth is that British values are no superior to those of any other nation; the idea is patronising to anyone of non-British origin. Improving social cohesion is a laudable objective – but linking terrorism to integration produces a dangerous confusion over the roots of the problem, which ultimately stigmatises and alienates some of the poorest communities in this country.

Terrorists are not motivated by the faith of the 1.6 billion regular folk walking this planet; Muslims aren’t immune to bombs and bullets and they experience a double penalty in such attacks: the same trauma as all other citizens, plus the guilt cloud that hangs over them all thereafter.

"The government could be honest about the risks to domestic security of foreign military interventions – risks the public may or may not wish to accept. It can invest heavily in the security services working to keep the country safe. This means more resources, but it also means not creating a climate of suspicion around Muslims, who, like everyone else, are partners in the common goal of preserving life – incidentally, the highest of values in Islamic law. Creating dichotomies between British and Islamic values only feeds a toxic narrative."

The aftermath of recent horrific events shows that people from all faiths and none, with diverse value systems, can come together to emphasise love, solidarity and unity. We don’t need lessons in British values; but our politicians need to learn about not widening the very divisions they believe to be the problem.