August 16, 2006
U.K.: Reasons Behind British Muslim Extremism Debated
by Jan Jun
Does a failure to assimilate make British-born Muslims ready recruits for extremist groups? (AFP)
LONDON, August 16, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Just over a year since the terrorist attacks on London's transport system on July 7, 2005, Britain is on alert again.
Another threat, this time targeting trans-Atlantic passenger planes, has allegedly been averted, and those involved once again appear to be mainly young British-born Muslims.
Now, in the wake of last week's scare, Britons of all walks of life are debating what is behind the rise of such extremist groups.
Some British Muslim experts argue that the roots of the problem are economic.
"Governments ought to be tackling the whole issue of social exclusion," says Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, the leader of the Muslim Parliament and the director of the Muslim Institute. "If, obviously, nothing is done, then, of course, people, Muslim youth living in their own ghettos, will find some demagogues who will exploit the situation. This is precisely what has happened."
Utopian Ideals, Not PovertyOther experts concur that the deprivation and the self-imposed seclusion of the Muslim ghettoes need to be tackled. But not all agree that these economic and social factors are the main ideological cause of terrorism.
"I think it's clear from the profiles that have been done of the July 7 [2005] bombers that socioeconomic deprivation was not a major factor or even indeed a significant factor in their motivation," says Paul Wilkinson, who chairs the Center for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.
"They appear to have been inculcated with Al-Qaeda ideology and were committing these actions because they believed they were waging part of a global holy war," he adds.
Wilkinson says that the young Muslim Britons behind last year's suicide attack in London came from better-off families. And some of the 24 alleged terrorists arrested last week had relatively prosperous professions.
According to Wilkinson, the ideology of the terrorists is in many ways similar to other terrorist groupings of the past century.
"They have this illusion, which many terrorists have, of course, in all sorts of movements, that somehow terror will be the magic weapon for undermining their enemies, and ultimately defeating them, and [in this case] enabling them to set up some kind of international caliphate, a pan-Islamist state," he says.
Foreign Policy To Blame?
Some British Muslims and their organizations blame Britain's foreign policy for the growth of terrorism. They want it changed and presented their position in an open letter to Prime Minister Tony Blair on August 12.
They criticize Britain's involvement in Iraq and blame Blair for such steps as not calling for an immediate cease-fire in the Israel-Lebanon war that raged over the past four weeks.
Do British Muslims isolate themselves? (AFP, file photo)
Imam Ibrahim Mogra, one of the leaders of the Muslim Council of Britain, says that the signatories of the letter do not claim foreign policy is the only reason why young people embrace extremism. But he says there is no doubt many young Muslims are angered by the government's positions.