23 October 2006
Publication: New Statesman
Dear Sir,
Martin Bright (NS, Oct 23rd 2006) has a known and longstanding problem with
getting his facts straight when it comes to reporting about Islam and
Muslims. His dismal effort last week, was no exception.
He says that the Muslim Council of Britain was not invited to the Ruth Kelly
speech on Oct 11. Wrong. We were indeed invited, but our secretary-general
could not attend the Ruth Kelly event because the timing clashed with an
existing diary commitment he had with the Home Secretary, Dr John Reid, and
we informed Kelly's department accordingly.
He claims that the MCB engages in a 'dismissal of certain Muslim minority
groups' and has an 'ambiguous attitude' towards suicide bombing. If his
awful booklet for Policy Exchange, 'When Progressives Treat with
Reactionaries', is anything to go by, then one can assume that in his first
allegation Bright is referring to the MCB's position in relation to the
Ahmadi community. He does not seem to comprehend that the view that Ahmadis
cannot be regarded as Muslims is not a viewpoint that is simply limited to
the MCB. Muslim scholars worldwide together with the followers of all the
main Muslim schools of thought, are agreed that the Ahmadis are a non-Muslim
sect. As for suicide bombing, the MCB has repeatedly stated that the
deliberate targeting of civilians is completely unacceptable.
Whether any of this will serve to help Bright to better understand Muslims
and Islam is quite another matter though.
Yours faithfully,
Mr Inayat Bunglawala
Assistant Secretary General,
The Muslim Council of Britain
PO Box 57330,
London E15 1NT