Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK

Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK
MPACUK
Founder(s) Asghar Bukhari
Zulfikar Bukhari
Tassadiq Rehman
Muddassar Ahmed
Key people Catherine Heseltine[1]
(CEO)
Website Mpacuk.org
This article is about the British organization. For the U.S. organization, see Muslim Public Affairs Council

The Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK (MPACUK) is a not-for-profit British Muslim organization set up to address a perceived under-representation of Muslims in British politics. The group campaigns on issues affecting Britain's Muslim population primarily through electoral campaigns and media appearances.[2]

Contents

Aims and policies

MPACUK encourages Muslims to participate in tactical voting against MPs who support policies which it considers not to be in Muslims' interest. This can extend both to national issues such as civil liberties, Islamophobia and anti-terror legislation; and to foreign policy, including the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Israel-Palestine conflict and the Lebanon.

Campaigns

2011

In June 2011, MPACUK launched a Stop Islamophobia Week campaign due to the rise in anti-muslim hate crimes.

In the same year, a campaign to encourage Muslims to YES in the UK was also launched Alternative Vote referendum.[3]

Involvement in Elections

2010

MPACUK was involved in campaigning to unseat 6 MPs in England. This included campaigning against Phil Woolas for alleged anti-Muslim bias. The campaign resulted in Phil Woolas winning a majority by 103 votes.[4] However, after an eventual court-case resulted in suspension as an MP and ban from holding public office for three years for "knowingly making false statements about his Liberal Democrat opponent" Elwyn Watkins, by alleging in his campaign literature that Watkins attempted to get support from Muslim extremists who advocated violence against Woolas. MPACUK was active in the Oldham campaign, and according to the BBC, "urged Muslim voters to help unseat Phil Woolas, and targeted several other Labour MPs, who MPAC judged to have pro-Israeli positions and who supported the war in Iraq." Woolas stated "There was vehement anti-semitism going on in the area, canvassing amongst the Asian population in the area saying: don't vote for the Jew. As it happens, I'm not Jewish but the fact my son's Christian name is a Jewish name was used against me." MPACUK denied responsibility for the rumours.[5]

MPACUK campaigned to remove Andrew Dismore from office, stating he was someone "who backed the Iraq war and has a long record of Islamophobia", and claimed responsibility for his defeat.[6]

2005

Labour MP Lorna Fitzsimons became the target of an MPACUK campaign when she stood for re-election at the 2005 General Election in the constituency of Rochdale, which has a significant Muslim population. The All-Party Parliamentary Report noted with concern MPACUK's campaign against Lorna Fitzsimons and that leaflets had been printed by MPACUK, which claimed that Fitzsimons had done nothing to help the Palestinians because she was a Jewish member of the Labour Friends of Israel.[7] Fitzsimons, who was a member of the Labour Friends of Israel, is not in fact Jewish.[8] MPACUK later apologised for the inaccurate description.[7]

MPACUK was described by Jack Straw as "most egregious" after it actively campaigned for Muslims in his Blackburn constituency to vote tactically against him in the 2005 general election.

Allegations of Antisemitism

In 2004, MPACUK was the subject of a no-platform order by the National Union of Students, because of its alleged publication of antisemitic conspiracy theories and inciteful racist material, and further material on its website encouraging activists to break the law.[9]

After Lorna Fitzsimons's defeat, in 2006, CST accused MPACUK of antisemitism. An All Party Parliamentary Inquiry into Anti-semitism observed that MPACUK was criticised by the CST for promoting the idea of a worldwide Zionist conspiracy and using material taken from neo-Nazi, white nationalist, and Holocaust denial websites. The report also noted CST's assertion that "use of ‘Zionist’ as a replacement for ‘Jewish’ is common on the MPACUK website" and that MPACUK has articulated antisemitic conspiracy theories through the language of anti-Zionism.[7]

MPACUK denies being anti-semitic and state that "it is worth noting that the labels of anti-Semitism and holocaust denial are being placed upon anyone that is critical of Israel by some Zionists".[10]

Notes

  1. ^ [1]. Retrieved 2010-12-24.
  2. ^ [2] About MPACUK. Retrieved 2010-12-25.
  3. ^ [3], MPACUK Say Vote Yes
  4. ^ [4]. Oldham Election Result. Retrieved 2010-12-24.
  5. ^ [5]. BBC MPACUK involvement article. Retrieved 2010-12-24.
  6. ^ [6] Times, MPACUK claims responsibility for defeat of Andrew Dismore in Hendon. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
  7. ^ a b c [7]. Report of the All-Party Parliamentary Inquiry Into Antisemitism], All-Party Parliamentary Group against Anti-Semitism, 7 September 2006.
  8. ^ Ben Morris, BICOM's new CEO, SomethingJewish.co.uk
  9. ^ Motion 118: Welfare, Minutes of NUS Annual Conference, 29–31 March 2004
  10. ^ [8], MPACUK FAQ: Are you anti-Semitic? Do you deny the holocaust?

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