12/15/07 "The
Guardian"
-- - This week's forensic
exposure by the BBC programme Newsnight of the
apparent fabrication of evidence underpinning an
inflammatory report into British Muslims by the
Tory-linked think tank
Policy
Exchange has revealed the soft underbelly of
what has become an increasingly poisonous and
dangerous campaign.
Throughout this year, a
steady stream of hostile and sensationalised stories
about the Muslim community in both press and
television - often based on research by apparently
reliable think tanks - has helped feed anti-Muslim
prejudice to the point where Britons were found this
summer by a
Harris opinion poll to be more suspicious of
Muslims than Americans or citizens of any other
major west European country.
Policy Exchange's
October
report, The Hijacking of British Islam: How
extremist literature is subverting Britain's mosques
- which claimed that a quarter of a representative
sample of 100 mosques had been found to be selling
"extremist material, some of it anti-semitic,
misogynistic, separatist and homophobic" - was a
typical case. The story was given top billing by
several newspapers and broadcasters, including the
Times (on its front page) and the BBC.
On Wednesday,
Newsnight - which had been going to run Policy
Exchange's report as an exclusive story - revealed
that it had investigated five out of 25 receipts for
such literature provided by Policy Exchange's
researchers and found clear evidence that they had
been faked, written by the same person and/or were
not issued by the mosques in question. Policy
Exchange insists it stands by its research, but so
far refuses to say whether it believes the receipts
are genuine.
It might be assumed
from this that the other 20 receipts were found to
be authentic and that Policy Exchange's basic case
was solid. It has now become clear that is not the
case. Newsnight insiders make clear that they didn't
have the time or resources to check the other
receipts - and in at least one of those that they
didn't look into, supposedly issued by Edinburgh
central mosque, the mosque authorities have said
that leaflets claimed to have been found there
calling for the killing of the apostates were in
fact dumped in the mosque grounds after the report
was published.
Given the clear
evidence of falsification at the heart of Policy
Exchange's work, it cannot be taken in any way as a
piece of reliable research - and there must be
serious doubt as to whether the 100 mosques
supposedly surveyed were in fact a representative
sample. Policy Exchange has form in this area:
earlier this year, the methodology and reliability
of another heavily-publicised Policy Exchange report
on alleged British Muslim attitudes, Living Apart
Together, came under heavyweight academic
attack.
Of course, as
Soumaya Ghannoushi remarks today in a blog for the
1990 Trust: "Islamic bookshops are a far cry from
Waterstones or Borders. Some of the books on sale on
djinns, angels, dreams, signs of the day of
judgement and hellfire often make me
laugh/cringe/both". You can also see plenty of ugly
material in other religious institutions in Britain,
such as the homophobic pamphlets I recently found on
display in a south London evangelical church.
But the constant regurgitation by the media of
Muslim-baiting "research" by hard right think tanks
(the
Centre of Social Cohesion is another offender)
not only misleads the public about one of the most
sensitive issues of our time - it is also clearly
driven by a neoconservative political agenda, which
seeks to convince people that jihadist terror
attacks in Britain and elsewhere are driven not by
outrage at western violence in the Muslim world but
by opposition to western freedom.
A quick glance at
the profiles of those involved in Policy Exchange
underlines the point. Its policy director, Dean
Godson, who blustered at Jeremy Paxman on Wednesday,
worked for the Reagan administration in the US as
special assistant to the secretary of the Navy, John
Lehman, was a signatory to the The Project for a New
American Century and was special assistant to the
jailed former Telegraph owner Conrad Black. Charles
Moore, the former Daily Telegraph and Spectator
editor who has made the case for public debate about
whether the prophet Muhammad was a paedophile, is
the Policy Exchange chairman. And who did he
replace? Policy Exchange's co-founder, Michael Gove
- author of that rallying text for British neocons
Celsius 7/7 - and now David Cameron's education
spokesman.