UK Islamist Leader Exposed in Ashley Madison Hack

Originally published under the title “UK Islamist Hamza Tzortzis ‘Found’ on Ashley Madison Hack List.”
See Mr. Kassam’s follow-up article, “British Islamist Hamza Tzortzis’s Ashley Madison Account Details.”

British Islamist leader Hamza Tzortzis believes that Muslims who leave Islam should be killed, and that women looking to cheat on their husbands should hit him up online.

A well-known British Islamist preacher, Hamza Tzortzis, has turned up on the Ashley Madison user list that was leaked by hackers earlier this week, according to his own Facebook page.

Tzortzis, who is a prominent member of the Islamic Education and Research Academy, which tours British universities, posted yesterday that he had been tipped off that his details were included in the leak, but he denied ever using the extramarital dating service.

He is best known for his debates with atheist Richard Dawkins, but Tzortzis has also made statements flagged up in the British media in recent years. He has claimed that those who leave Islam “should be killed” and has argued that beheading is painless. He has also argued in favour of setting up an Islamic caliphate.

He told his 92,000 Facebook fans yesterday:

It has come to my attention that my details are on the Ashley Madison data leak. This includes my name, address, and bank card details.

This is an obvious case of fraud. My email address (this website doesn’t verify emails, and all the relevant emails went to junk) can be found online and so can my address, as it is linked to my business account, which is registered online. My date of birth is known from either previous lectures or Facebook. These types of online attacks are not uncommon, for example in the past year there have been multiple attempts to access my emails.

The first transaction, he said, took place in October 2014, just a short while after Tzortzis returned from his hajj (pilgrimage) to Mecca.

He explained that he had not looked at his bank statements in detail for many months and asserted that he was taking the matter up with the police.

But not all of his followers were convinced by his reasoning. Critical comments on Tzortzis’s Facebook page began disappearing late on Saturday night. Breitbart London took screenshots of some of the more critical ones before they disappeared altogether, which most have as of Sunday morning.

One critic said,

So Hamza, you are claiming that some guy knew all of your private information and wanted to screw with you so he created a fake account on Ashley Madison. This guy then paid hundreds of dollars to maintain the account for 9 months. This account was then used to make transactions at locations where you were also present at the time. Then the ultimate plan was to hack the Ashley Madison database and release 40 million users so you could be exposed. Am I getting this right?

Tzortzis originally replied to the user before the comment disappeared: “You’re an idiot. Read the post before you write. The amount was 15 pounds a month, not hundreds.”

The amount was actually around £135 in total, taking the amount into the “hundreds.”

Tzortzis noted, however, that some of Ashley Madison’s features were “permissible” in Islam. He wrote:

My whereabouts and activities, both private and public are traceable and recorded, and there is without any doubt that I have not pursued such immoral acts that the site promotes (this includes permissible acts, for instance the endeavour to find another halal wife [who can also be a non-Muslim] who wanted to be with a married man, which is allowed in Islam). My face is recorded when I enter and leave work, and the gym (the main places I go to). My social and professional meetings are public, and with people that can honestly confirm my presence.

Another critic noted,

So in summary, a profile that fits you quite well was made and transactions made that match your whereabouts. As you say the australian transactions were made when you were there. Either its someone in your inner circle or you. Anthony weiner also claimed hackers had stolen his identity.

Mr Tzortzis has not yet provided his followers with the police report that he claims to have filed.

Raheem Kassam is the editor-in-chief of Breitbart London and a fellow at the Middle East Forum.

Raheem Kassam is the former editor-in-chief of Breitbart London. From a Muslim family, he is devoted to combating radical Islam and exposing anti-Western activists and trends. He is credited with the downfall of Baroness Jenny Tonge and Liberal Democrat MP David Ward. In 2012, Mr. Kassam broke the Muslim Patrols story that made international headlines, and he has had a steady stream of other noteworthy media stories. He is the former chief of staff to UKIP leader Nigel Farage. He founded the counter-extremism watchdog Student Rights and served as the communications director at the Henry Jackson Society. He co-launched The Commentator website as well as founding TrendingCentral.com. He is featured regularly on the BBC, Sky News, Channel 4, Al Jazeera, and many other television channels and has been an op-ed contributor for publications such as the Wall Street Journal, Daily Telegraph, Jewish Chronicle, and Times of Israel.
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I recently witnessed something I haven’t seen in a long time. On Friday, August 16, 2024, a group of pro-Hamas activists packed up their signs and went home in the face of spirited and non-violent opposition from a coalition of pro-American Iranians and American Jews. The last time I saw anything like that happen was in 2006 or 2007, when I led a crowd of Israel supporters in chants in order to silence a heckler standing on the sidewalk near the town common in Amherst, Massachusetts. The ridicule was enough to prompt him and his fellow anti-Israel activists to walk away, as we cheered their departure. It was glorious.