Islamophobia in the British media

By Barry Mason
www.wsws.org

A recent Channel 4 Television “Dispatches” documentary, “Muslims under Siege,” showed how the demonisation of Muslims and the propagation of Islamophobia have become widespread in British media and politics.

Presented by journalist Peter Oborne, the programme was based on research for a pamphlet, also entitled, “Muslims under Siege”[1] written by Oborne and James Jones, a television journalist.

The “Dispatches” programme commissioned a survey of newspaper reportage by the Cardiff School of Journalism. It involved nearly 1,000 articles written since the year 2000, noting the content and context of articles pertaining to Muslims and Islam.

The findings showed that 69 percent of the articles presented Muslims as a source of problems not just in terms of terrorism but also on cultural issues, and that 26 percent of the articles portrayed Islam as dangerous, backward or irrational.

Professor Justin Lewis said the survey of the articles showed a “series of ideas repeated over time... that links Muslims with terrorism... with extremism... with incompatibility with British values. Those ideas are repeated over and over again and inevitably they are going to play a part in shaping public consciousness.”

A significant finding was that the emphasis of the articles switched this year from terrorism (27 percent) to religious and cultural issues (32 percent). Professor Lewis explained that the focus on Muslims having different cultural values is “in some ways more damaging, it portrays all British Muslims with this notion of being extreme and incompatible with British values.”

Many of the articles in tabloid newspapers were either outright lies or gross distortions. A Sun newspaper report of October 7, 2006 stated that a “Muslim hate mob” had attacked a house in an exclusive suburb of Windsor that was being refurbished to be used by British soldiers returning from Afghanistan. Whilst the house had been vandalised, no evidence could be produced to show it had been carried out by Muslims. Oborne spoke to the senior policeman who had investigated the case. He explained the attack had taken place overnight and there was no evidence to show who had done it.

The pamphlet states the real reason for the attack was “simpler and rather closer to home.” An article written in the local paper the previous day revealed that the local army barracks received three anonymous calls objecting to the presence of the soldiers. The calls were from local residents objecting that the plans for the house would lower property prices. A petition had been also been signed by 40 residents objecting to the use of the house by the army.

Three months later the Sun had to issue a formal statement retracting the story, but has issued no apology.

A Daily Express article of October 24, 2005 claimed that pressure from Muslims had led to two major banks withdrawing the use of “piggy” banks in their advertising material. In fact one of the banks, the Halifax, had not used piggy banks for several years and the other bank, the NatWest, issued a press statement explaining, “There is absolutely no fact in the story. We simply had a UK-wide savings marketing campaign, which included pictures of piggy banks, running until the end of September. Piggy banks have been and will continue to be used as a promotional item by NatWest.”

The pamphlet makes clear the denigration of Muslims is not confined to the tabloid press, but is also present in the broadsheets, including the “liberal” ones. It notes that Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee, then writing in the Independent ten years ago, said “I am an Islamophobe and proud of it.” In another example from the Independent, Bruce Anderson wrote: “There are widespread fears that Muslim immigrants, reinforced by political pressure and, ultimately, by terrorism, will succeed where Islamic armies failed and change irrevocably the character of European civilisation.”

Also quoted is the notorious outburst of author Martin Amis in the Times: “There is a definite urge—don’t you have it? The Muslim community will have to suffer until it gets its house in order.”

The pamphlet notes: “Islamophobia is a tremendous force for unification in British public culture. It does not merely bring liberal progressives like Polly Toynbee together with curmudgeonly Tory commentators like Bruce Anderson. It also enlists militant atheists with Christian believers.”

In the introduction to the pamphlet, the authors say that the impulse to write it came from the comments of ex-Foreign Secretary Jack Straw against Muslim women wearing the veil. This was then taken up by other Labour politicians.

Labour MP Phil Woolas, then Minister for Race Relations, wrote to the press in support of Straw’s statements, claiming that wearing the veil invited hostility. Interviewed in the TV documentary by Oborne, Woolas claimed he was merely reflecting the views of his constituents.

The pamphlet comments, “It soon became clear that this was more than a random rumination from a member of the government... Labour appeared... to try to identify with a general mood of resentment and anxiety about the presence of Muslim communities in this country and to intervene in the politics of religious identity.”

As the programme pointed out, less than one percent of Muslim women wear the veil.

The campaign of Islamophobia, especially since the London bombings of July 7, 2005, has led to increased threats towards Muslims. An ICM poll of Muslims found that since July 2005, 61 percent report an increase in hostility and 36 percent said they or a family member had been subject to abuse.

Oborne spoke to several Muslims who had been subject to abuse and attacks. Sarfraz Sarwar has lived in Basildon, Essex for 40 years. He related how, over the last few years, his house has been subject to fire bombings and had bricks thrown at it. Sarwar has set up surveillance cameras around his house and feels he is living in a state of siege.

The programme and pamphlet brought out how the far-right British National Party (BNP) uses Islamophobia to try to increase its influence, noting that Nick Griffin, BNP leader, “has been inspired by the press.” In Griffin’s words, “We bang on about Islam. Why? Because to the ordinary public out there it’s the thing they can understand. It’s the thing the newspaper editors sell newspapers with.”

In their foreword to the pamphlet, Jones and Oborne point out that Muslims in Britain are:

* Mainly young.
* Tend to live in the most deprived cities.
* Are disadvantaged and discriminated against in housing, education and employment by comparison with other faith groups.

The orchestrated campaign of Islamophobia can only serve to increase their isolation and lead to a growing frustration.

While noting that Islamophobia was promoted by the Labour cabinet following Straw’s lead in 2006, a limitation of the pamphlet is that it fails to link it to other aspects of government policy: namely the whipping up of fear of terrorist attacks and using the “war against terror” to justify the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as numerous attacks on democratic rights.

Notes:
[1] “Muslims under Siege” by Peter Oborne and James Jones, Democratic Audit, 2008

Submitted by awakenedgoyim on Tue, 2008-07-29 14:11

..if articles were published that tell the truth about the babylonian talud? Or, perhaps about the banking families and their stranglehold on everyone! Perhaps some articles about the media bias, and how they work in cahoots with all the worst criminals on Earth, to manipulate us with lies!

How about an exposé section, listing all the traitors.

Grim Reaper | Wed, 2008-07-30 15:35

I hope the excellent analysis of "Images of Islam in UK" will expand to cover the electronic media too.
Here are a few reasons why: There are some news editors who are fond of sensationalists wishing to see their audience to live in what Jeanne Jordan, author of The Panic diaries, calls "a world of perpetual 'duck and cover', a world of terror alerts scrolling across the bottom of our television screens. A world where evening news fees our fear." Many of us are beginning to get weary of the pushier sort of ‘expert’ declare Christopher Booker and Richard North. In their book, Scared to Death: From BSE to Global Warming they point out: Gone is the sense of proportion, the admission of scientific doubt, the ability to weigh risks against benefits. Taking seriously a year’s worth of their health warnings would give anyone an eating disorder. This tendency makes Anne Applebaum, author of 'Finding Things to Fear' remark: Now that we've eliminated most of the things that the human race once feared, we've just invented new ones to replace them.

 
The discourses of state agencies locate Islam and Muslim communities not simply as "problem communities" but as security concerns, notes Defence Studies scholar Katherine Brown. There is a need to watch out if certain contributors to this debate about minority communities wish to steer it from discussing 'politics of difference' to stirring up the 'politics of fear'.
We need to be wary of pundits who are shy, unable or unwilling to offer alternate set of
policies and positions. What we don’t deserve is another discussion that’s governed by fear and innuendo. What we don’t wish to hear from the pundits is the kind of discourse that uses religion as a wedge, and patriotism as a bludgeon – that sees opponents
not as competitors to challenge, but enemies to demonize.
 
It will be interesting to examine if discussions about religio-political identity, affiliations, reading habits and opinion polls of Muslim youth have been used as the opening up of 'opportunity spaces' generated by elements who push the discourse into security-related realm.
 
It is more than a coincidence that reports by Newsnight’s Richard Watson depend heavily on contentious and controvertial informants who portray certain communities negatively. Dean Godson, Douglas Murray, Dominic Whitman (who openly boasts intending to "perform a witch hunt but using 21st Century tools"). It doesn't take long to spot that all these contribute to voice of negation, fear and dehumanisation. It remains unclear why the BBC continues to allow belligerent right-wingers and neocons who frequently demonize, distort and denounce identity and intentions of a certain community.
While boasting aloud about being balanced some regular commentators stoke panic and tend to trade truth for tired tautologies. Serious questions pertaining to the methodology and approach taken by some of the aforementioned persons have been raised by scholars including Dr. Marie Breen Smyth and Dr Jeroen Gunning, director and deputy director of the Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Contemporary Political Violence at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth They warn that "the politicisation of research can lead to serious distortions in debates on policy issues." There are reason to exercise caution in debates over multiculturalism, security and British Muslims.
 
One is yet to notice any attempts by BBC editors to widen the horizon of discussions by inviting reknowned and respectable scholars  to  offer alternate approaches that reinforce reflection, respect and recognition. Instead, the BBC has been pulling several of its controversial reports together to create a contentious chorus. Is it because these guys happen to be  Peter Barron's pet paranoia pundits?
 
The BBC audiences may be saved from shallow and pallid remarks with the depth and sophistication of scholars who suggest alternate ways of explaining motives and machinations behind damning and dismissive tendencies include well-known scholars such as Ira Chernus, Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder and author of Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin. In his works Chermus tells us about opinion makers mesmerized by John-Wayne-style tales of "real men" fighting evil on the frontier --is this why Watson periodically brings elements harping on to remind as to who must be identified and established as "evil" and then promote all policies and practices it takes to "contain evil". Is it Watson's personal inclination or part of a collective pursuit in tandem with those who lobby for stricter measures to regulate certain sections of Britain's ethnically diverse society?
Chermus draws attention to the following two experts yet to be seen on BBC's discussions on extremist or violent tendencies and their treatment by the present political authorities:
  
Catherine Albanese of the University of California at Santa Barbara writes: "Ordered conduct of foreign policy will, according to the conservative ethic, keep evil at bay and erect the safeguards that protect Christian life. Thus, containment for conservatives means the management of evil." But the management of evil is a lifetime task. Far from relieving anxiety, it is bound to create more of it --Albanese reminds that authorities are often unable to admit the deepest sources of their guilt without destroying their sense of who they were." So, instead, they went (and still go) looking for other people to control and blame them for their troubles. Our most recent candidates are, of course, the terrorists.
 
Princeton University's John F. Wilson explains why. The obsession with managing evil comes from "a concern, often exaggerated, to achieve control over those aspects of life experienced as uncertain." From the Puritans to the present, people bent on controlling their lives have been haunted by the inescapable fear that they might lose that very control.
 
Sensational cases startle the public into accepting a new understanding by opening gateways to the public’s fears and frustrations, and igniting processes that illuminate the boundaries of a community, notes Indiana Professor Steven Chermark adding: "The media defines these events, relying primarily on representatives from institutions typically used in the construction of news."
Is it then a coincidence that many of Watson's informants are introduced by pseudonyms and/or with guised identities? In his report on 17 April, Watson introduced Glen Jenvey - erstwhile affiliate of the VIGIL group- as a freelance “expert”.  Telling us little about this person and nothing about his background and his methods prompts many questions, as raised here by Richard Bartholomew, a PhD in the Study of Religion. : http://blogs.salon.com/0003494/2006/11/15.html
 
  It is troubling to observe Newsnight’s relentless reliance on shadowy persons/organisations prone to concealment and camouflaging real motives behind the smokescreens. Given the choices why some in the BBC subscribe to concoctions rather than cogitations? Leaving irresponsible and vacuous journalism unchecked risks reducing Newsnight as a visual manifestation of the tabloid media. One way to ensure the principles of neutrality and evenhandedness are upheld is enable the viewers notice that a process is in place that vets the 'experts' and identifies persons and organizations with verifiable credentials and background about supporters and promoters of such 'research'.
scrutinizer | Wed, 2008-07-30 21:36

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