Diaspora Islamism

The Times of London just published a front-page story on the Islamic Human Rights Commission, a British organization tied closely to the Iranian regime. The journalist, Andrew Norfolk, notes that:

A human rights organisation supported by Jeremy Corbyn has received more than £1 million in charity cash despite being run by self-declared Islamist revolutionaries closely aligned to Iran who say that the West is “the enemy” and Britain a “Stasi state”.

...

The London-based group, given £1.2 million since 2013 by a charity that received £250,000 from the taxpayer via Gift Aid, claims to fight for the oppressed “whosoever they are and whomsoever oppresses them”. Its website fails to declare links to Iran, a lack of transparency highlighted by a leading Iranian campaigner who has accused the group of acting as a propaganda tool for Tehran.

Among British Muslims, the IHRC is best known for organizing the annual ‘Al Quds Day’ march in London, in which crowds chant, “We are all Hezbollah ... with blood, with guns, we will free Palestine”. In fact, the success of the London rallies has led to similar events in cities across America.

Although the IHRC is a Shia organization tied to Tehran, it is happy to work with Sunni Islamists. In December, the IHRC is due to hold its annual ‘Islamophobia conference’ in London. The venue is P21 Gallery, a “charitable trust established to promote contemporary Arab art and culture.”

In fact, P21 is part of an elaborate network of charities and companies seemingly controlled by the proxies for the designated terrorist group Hamas. Dozens of companies with links to Hamas have been run out of one address: 32 Store Street in East London – home of Sayam and Co, an accountancy firm with a very specific set of clients.

In company documents filed with the British government, associated company directors of some of the firms listed at 32 Store Street included Muhammad Sawalha, who, according to the BBC, is “said to have masterminded much of Hamas’s political and military strategy” from London. In 2017, The Times reported that Sawalha had been appointed to Hamas’s political bureau.

Given the IHRC’s links to the murderous Iranian regime, and its willingness to work openly with proxies for the terror group Hamas, it is with interest that we note an upcoming IHRC event later this month. On October 19, the IHRC is broadcasting its documentary, The Uprising, “which tells the story of resistance against racism in Europe.”

Contributors to the documentary feature left-leaning American scholars, as well as one Hatem Bazian, a Berkeley Islamist academic who serves as Professor of Islamic Law and Theology at California’s Zaytuna College. Bazian has a long history of anti-Semitism and ties to Hamas networks in North America. Three other academics, from Berkeley and San Diego State University, are also listed as “contributors.”

We have often written about the intra-Islamist division found in many pockets of American Islamism. But it is important to note intra-Islamist partnerships as well. Despite internecine Sunni-Shia conflict in the Middle East, in the Muslim diaspora, with the help of the Left, Khomeinist and Hamas links seem to be flourishing once again.

Sam Westrop has headed Islamist Watch since March 2017, when MEF absorbed the counter-extremism unit of Americans for Peace and Tolerance (APT), where he was the research director. Before that, he ran Stand for Peace, a London-based counter-extremism organization monitoring Islamists throughout the UK.
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