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Weekly Worker 572 Thursday April 14 2005
Targeting the mosque
George Galloway takes the fight to pro-war New Labour
The Respect general election campaign in east London was launched with
great fanfare at the Bishopgate Institute on April 6 - the event was a
feast of argument, oratory and passion, said George Galloway. Like
him other Respect tops put on a great show of confidence and looking forward
to May 5, when comrade Galloway will be elected as MP for Bethnal Green
and Bow.
Speaker after speaker condemned Blair and pointed to the need to defeat
all those Labour MPs who voted in favour of going to war. Not least amongst
them, of course, is the sitting MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, Oona King.
Oliur Rahman, candidate in neighbouring Poplar and Canning Town and recently
elected local councillor, said that he had warned King after her
vote for the slaughter of thousands of innocent children in Iraq
that he and Respect would do anything to stop her.
The mood was bullish and defiant: We are, declared Galloway,
the ghost of Labour past. Respect would recreate the Labour
Party of Keir Hardie - who had won his first seat to parliament in West
Ham. Vitriol was poured on the policies of Blair and his government. Keen
to portray themselves as the only alternative to New Labour in the
east end, with policies the majority of people agree on,
no platform speaker made even a passing reference to the third letter
of the Respect acronym - S for socialism. Instead it was community,
trade unionism and peace - and another word whose
initial does not feature in the name: Labour.
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Oona King: on the defensive
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The battle for Bethnal Green and Bow has certainly been fierce. Galloway
has rattled the New Labour machine. King is said to be deeply unpopular
among many in her constituency because she voted for the war. The constituency
has 55,000 muslims of Bangladeshi origin, who comprise more than half
of the electorate. This population may well be willing to mark their opposition
to Kings voting record by voting for Galloway.
The first weekend after the official campaign begun saw a widely reported
clash, allegedly involving Respect supporters, on Sunday April 10, when
King was pelted with eggs and vegetables during a commemoration to mark
the deaths of 134, mostly Jewish, victims of the last V2 missile to hit
London. The Daily Telegraph quoted one angry young local muslim who condemned
King: We all hate her. She comes here with her Jewish friends who
are killing our people and then they come to our back yards
it
is out of order. What do they expect? (April 11). The sitting MP
responded bitterly that she was astounded by the sheer ignorance,
which she found disgusting.
King is, of course, herself Jewish and has lost no time in making allegations
of anti-semitism against the Respect campaign. She told the Evening Standard
that some voters have been advised by Respect members that they should
not vote for her because of her Jewishness. Respect has responded to this
smear after a fashion - with the usual Galloway threat of legal action.
The Guardian reported John Rees as stating that this is one of the
most disgusting slurs I can remember for a long time
George Galloway
and everyone in Respect has a long record of fighting anti-semitism
Oona King should be cognisant of the dangers, having already paid out
two sets of libel writs to George Galloway (April 12). Rather than
counter Kings allegations politically, Respect threatens to use
the bourgeois courts.
The following days Guardian carried a letter signed by three Jewish/SWP
supporters of Respect - John Rose, Chanie Rosenberg and Sabby Sagall -
who also condemned the accusations of anti-semitism, which in any case
had not been proved in relation to those who mounted the attack on King.
They denied that any Respect members were involved in the egg-throwing
incident, which they said was opposed by the organisation on principle.
Elsewhere King and Galloway were locked in battle at a local debate organised
by the BBC. She berated him for his infamous salute to Saddam Hussein
and said that she would not trust him to deliver a pizza.
He countered in equally bitter terms and the opposing sides booed and
heckled. With over two weeks to go, the animosity looks sets to deepen.
New Labour MPs and celebrity supporters are being trooped through the
constituency to shore up Kings 10,000 majority. Things could turn
very nasty, with Kings support for the war to the fore, whether
she likes it or not.
At the election launch, Galloway argued against those who say we
are simply targeting the muslim vote. But a glance at the list of
speakers joining him and Lindsey German at a rally on April 18 in Newham
Town Hall leaves you in no doubt that this group is being targeted. Four
out of seven speakers are muslim community leaders. Abdul
Khaliq Mian, candidate for East Ham, was introduced at the launch rally
as a member of the Muslim Alliance. He has been working hard in his constituency
- by visiting all the mosques and making clear his religious/political
identity and commitment to his community.
Also with him on the platform will be Mufti Mustafa Sahib, principal of
Darul-Uloom London, an islamic school for boys. Its stated objectives
are to familiarise the young generation with the teaching of the
holy Quran and sunnah, so that they can practice islam and serve
the deen of allah. The purpose is to produce great scholars and huffz
to preserve and transmit the eternal message of allah (http://darululoomlondon.co.uk).
Also speaking will be Mufti Sadar-Ud-Din Sahib of the Imam Zakaria Academy
and Moulana Ijaz Ahmed Nairvi of the Masjid Siddiqia mosque in Birmingham.
Others to be featured include a representative from Voice of Africa radio
and Sri Lankan and Sikh speakers.
While winning the support of particular ethnic groups, including muslims
radicalised by the war on Iraq, is important, the problem is, of course,
that Respect is attempting to do so through the mosque. It is appealing
to the most conservative elements to deliver the vote on May 5. Inevitably
that means tempering your policies to fit in with what those elements
wish to hear. So principled left positions on a range of issues are dropped
by the Socialist Workers Party leadership of Respect - abortion, secularism,
private education, censorship ... A cursory glance at the reports posted
on the Respect website from other constituencies shows this approach is
being replicated nationally. Catholic churches, temples, mosques and other
religious institutions are being targeted.
But what about those muslims and others who reject their church leaders
but are against the war? Respects record on questions of womens
rights and other pressing social questions has been abysmal. Those who
want progressive answers do not seem to count. Winning votes on a principled
working class agenda does not figure in this quest for electoral success.
Anne Mc Shane
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