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Weekly Worker 618 Thursday March 30 2006
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Lies, smears and distortions
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The Stalinoid left has been at it again. In order to excuse homophobia
amongst the muslim establishment, some are suggesting that the March 25
Freedom of Expression rally was linked to the far-right BNP,
so as to smear Peter Tatchell and the gay rights group, Outrage. In fact
the event was organised by bourgeois liberals - and the BNP boycotted
it. Brett Lock of Outrage looks at the role of Ken Livingstones
well-paid apologists, Socialist Action
When Denis Fernando of the so-called ‘Lesbian and Gay Coalition Against
Racism’ (Lagcar) opens his mouth to proclaim the “truth” about something,
the listener can usually rely on what follows to be a tapestry of distortions
and misrepresentations.
Mr Fernando, a member of the secretive far-left Socialist Action group,
specialises in sowing discord and confusion, much like the green-eyed
dwarf, Tortuous Convolvulus, in the Asterix comics. For sowing discord,
Convolvulus was thrown to the lions - but the lions ended up eating each
other! Which is, naturally, exactly what Convolvulus expected.
Green-eyed Denis has recently infiltrated the gay muslim group, Imaan.
Even though he is not a muslim himself, he has been retained as their
“political consultant”. At last year’s Pride London parade he was seen
to be cheerleading and orchestrating the Imaan contingent, giving many
bystanders the impression that he is himself a muslim, rather than the
lapsed catholic he really is.
The previously clean-shaven Mr Fernando has recently started sporting
a beard. Perhaps this is just a fashion statement, but some wags have
wondered if this is not another attempt to pass himself off as a muslim
and ingratiate himself with the most devout of the devout.
Denis last week succeeded in getting Imaan to sign up to his press release
entitled “Don’t support the BNP - the truth about the Freedom of Expression
rally”, which, if he suffered from a Pinocchio affliction, would allow
him to generate enough lumber to stock a regional branch of B&Q.
Of course, the non-muslim Fernando is the only person quoted by name.
The other bit in direct quotes is attributed to “an Imaan spokesperson”.
This anonymity is not surprising, since Imaan’s last spokesperson to venture
into the mass media did so only on condition that she could don a burqa
and have her voice electronically altered. Actually, I do not blame her.
I know enough people who live with death threats to appreciate the position
she was in. So sad, then, that Denis manipulates Imaan into defending
the very people that force them to hide themselves in a mental panic room.
So, let’s give the Lagcar press release a good frisking.
The headline suggests that the Freedom of Expression rally was in reality
a British National Party rally. The truth is that it was organised by
a group of pro-democracy bloggers who solicited support for a perfectly
reasonable statement supporting the universal right to free expression.
The BNP, including their thinly disguised front-group, Civil Liberty,
were told in no uncertain terms right from the start that they were unwelcome
and unwanted.
The organisers said in a statement: “We have never at any time suggested
that their [the BNP] freedom of expression should be denied, but we do
assert our right to refuse to allow our campaign to be associated with
their racist outlook. They are perfectly at liberty to organise their
own events. Furthermore, the fascist fringe of British politics, including
the BNP, has a history of consistent association with political violence,
and we are campaigning against exactly that.”
Fascists do not believe in freedom of expression, and thus were explicitly
banned from the march. Indeed, the organisers described the BNP’s fake
concern for free speech as a “Trojan horse”. They stated firmly on the
free expression blog: “The principle of freedom of expression is used,
by some, as a Trojan horse, as a proxy for racism and islamophobia. Not
by me. Not by us. Not by this campaign.”
To those who complained that this was anti-free speech and a U-turn,
the march organisers took the ‘good riddance’ approach, snapping back:
“To those who are annoyed, I ask what part of this did you not understand:
this will be a march in favour of free expression, not a march against
muslims.”
Does any of this sound even vaguely like promoting a BNP agenda? Of course
not! And so, on the day, the BNP were nowhere in sight.
Of course, Lagcar/SA’s real objection was that the event would include
criticism of the same rightwing islamist reactionaries to whom they have
hitched their wagon. Just as they pressured Imaan to support the murderously
homophobic cleric, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, now they have managed to use Imaan
to attack gay groups who support free speech and push the bald-faced lie
that this was a closet BNP rally.
But, of course, if you are going to tell one porker, you may as well
carry on. Fernando’s next claim is: “Peter Tatchell is now speaking at
a rally which is being built and supported by the BNP and the Libertarian
Alliance.” Not only did the BNP have nothing to do with this rally, but
Tatchell’s speech roundly condemned the BNP’s homophobia and islamophobia,
expressing solidarity with the muslim community.
It is true that the Libertarian Alliance were invited to speak. Fernando’s
objection to the Libertarian Alliance is this: “[Libertarian Alliance
director Sean Gabb] defended the right to free speech of an evangelical
christian in Sweden who had been convicted under that country’s anti-hatred
legislation after describing homosexuality as abnormal, a horrible cancerous
tumour in the body of society.”
Excuse me? But didn’t Lagcar defend Sir Iqbal Sacranie only a month back
for saying essentially the same thing? Sure, they said they did not agree
with him, but they were still willing to share a platform with him. They
certainly did not support calls for Sir Iqbal’s prosecution. So it is
okay for muslims to insult gays, but don’t dare suggest that christians
have the same right? What a hypocrite Fernando is.
Naturally, once you have opened the door to Lies, you may as well let
his cousin, Misrepresentation, in too. For example, Fernando cites Outrage’s
call for the Unite Against Fascism conference to withdraw its invitation
to Sacranie as an attack on Sacranie’s free speech. But this wilfully
misses the point entirely. Outrage never said that Sacranie should be
shut up, banned or silenced. In fact, we criticised the police investigation
into his comments. Our point was that he was an inappropriate speaker
for an anti-fascist conference, echoing, as he does, the BNP’s bigoted
view of homosexuality. It seemed absurd - and still does - to ask LGBT
activists to stand up to the BNP together with groups who share the BNP’s
homophobic attitudes to gay people.
Another favoured trick of far-left sectarian propaganda is the twisted
logic that if group A supports a policy of group B, then necessarily group
B supports group A. Watch out for it - it is a favourite trick in their
arsenal.
In Denis Fernando’s press release, they claim that because the twits
in the UK Independence Party have signed a statement supporting free speech,
necessarily everyone else who supports the statement must therefore support
the UKIP agenda. How absurd is this! Should every person concerned with
privacy abandon their opposition to ID cards simply because UKIP are opposed
to them too? Is every group that is critical of Israel’s occupation of
the West Bank colluding with the anti-semitic David Duke - or, to bring
it closer to home - the Jew-hating BNP?
The relevant thing, as some of the muslim speakers at Saturday’s event
suggested, is that free speech is the greatest ally of religious minorities
and of women’s rights and gay rights. It is precisely free speech that
has enabled misogyny and homophobia to be challenged.
The same ‘blasphemies’ that make irreligious cartoons ‘objectionable’
also make gay muslims proclaiming their identity a ‘blasphemy’. The gay
community was the last target of a successful prosecution in the UK under
the (christian) blasphemy law. Do gay muslims want to be the next victims
if the law is extended instead of abolished? I doubt it.
As one of the few organised groups of gay muslims, Imaan had better watch
out. They will always be targets of opportunists and entryists with other
agendas. The LGBT human rights group Outrage has first-hand experience
of this. In Ian Lucas’s definitive history of the group from 1990-1996,
a section is devoted to the trouble-making of Lagcar (see p126 onwards):
“Throughout the year, Outrage meetings were being bogged down by report-backs,
factionalism and accusations of ‘entryism’. In particular, Lagcar was
seen as a disruptive element and intent on using Outrage meetings for
its own ends. They were putting forward very politically correct arguments,
but in a very disruptive and divisive way. The meetings were full of accusations,
completely unfounded, malicious accusations of sexism and racism: to the
point where people were driven away from the group.”
So nothing ever seems to change. Over 10 years later, Denis Fernando
and his Socialist Action entryists are still at it: sowing divisions and
diverting gay groups away from their core objective of struggling against
homophobia - and diverting gay muslims away from defending themselves
against the islamists who threaten their very existence.
http://brettlock.blogspot.com/2006/03/free-speech-v-socialst-action.html
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