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The Round-Up: Christchurch, Islamophobia, Home Office Failures and Modern Slavery

A white supremacist murdered 50 worshippers and injured 50 more in two consecutive terrorist attacks at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand during Friday Prayer on 15 March 2019.  The victims’ ages ranged from 3 to 77. Immediately prior to the attacks, the perpetrator emailed a 73-page manifesto to more than 30 recipients, including several media outlets and the office of Prime Minister Jacinda Arden. It expressed anti-immigrant hate speech, white supremacist rhetoric, and an unequivocal statement that the motive behind the attacks was to accelerate anti-Muslim and anti-migrant sentiment across majority white nations. 

Prime Minister Arden has been praised for her decisive leadership, admirable compassion, and emphasis on the solidarity between her country and the victims (many migrants, some refugees), their families, and the wider Muslim community.  She announced the ban of all military-style semi-automatic weapons and assault rifles in New Zealand, and ordered a  royal commission to examine whether police and intelligence services could have done more to prevent shootings. She refused to use the terrorist’s name, and implored her countrymen and women to “speak the names of those who were lost rather than the name of the man who took them.” The country’s Chief Censor made the possession and distribution of the gunman’s manifesto unlawful in New Zealand. The mosque’s imam thanked New Zealanders for their support, adding, “We are broken-hearted, but we are not broken.”

In the days since the attack, UK counter-terrorism chief Neil Basu has said that far-right terrorists are being radicalised by mainstream newspaper coverage. Basu condemned outlets such as the Sun, the Mirror and the Mail Online for uploading the gunman’s manifesto and his violent footage of the attack. On Wednesday, windows were smashed at five mosques in Birmingham. On Friday, an independent monitoring group reported that the number of anti-Muslim hate crimes reported across Britain increased by 593% in the week after the massacre.

In a Guardian interview with Simon Hattenstone, Miqdaadi Versi, head of media monitoring at the Muslim Council of Britain, further criticised the British press. He noted in particular papers which printed photographs of the shooter as a blond child, describing him as an ‘angelic boy’, and a BBC News presenter’s suggestion that anti-Muslim violence had intensified because the mainstream Muslim community had not done enough to condemn Islamist extremism. Meanwhile, more than a dozen Conservative counsellors suspended for posting Islamophobic or racist content online have had their membership quietly reinstated. 

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