The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #136372   Message #3592398
Posted By: Jim Carroll
15-Jan-14 - 02:41 PM
Thread Name: BS: Christian Persecution
Subject: RE: BS: Christian Persecution
Perhaps it's time to nowc this on the head altogether
"Alibhai-Brown, Lord Ahmed, and Mohamed Shafiq were the ones I quoted at length (apart from Anne Cryer, Jack Straw and the Pakistani Ch4 journalist)."

Other witnesses
Ann Cryer
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/1436867.stm

"Lord Ahmed,
Nazir Ahmed, Baron Ahmed (born 24 April 1957) is a member of the British House of Lords. He was appointed on the recommendation of Prime Minister Tony Blair in 1998. Along with Lord Alli, Baroness Warsi and Baroness Uddin, Lord Ahmed is one of the four current Muslim peers in the United Kingdom. Many of his political activities relate to the Muslim community both in the UK and abroad and he has often attracted controversy. He was suspended for a time from the Labour Party in 2012 after he was misquoted as placing a bounty on U.S. President Barack Obama and former President George W. Bush.
In 2013, Lord Ahmed was suspended again, this time for antisemitism; stemming from a report in The Times that he blamed a Jewish conspiracy for a prison sentence he received following a fatal motorway crash. The newspaper revealed that he appeared on Pakistani television and stated that he was imprisoned in 2009 because of pressure on the courts from Jews "who own newspapers and TV channels". He resigned from the Labour Party on 13 May."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazir_Ahmed,_Baron_Ahmed
This doesn't mention that he threatened to invade Westminster with a thousand Muslims if a piece of legislation he was opposing was passed.
Clearly a man to be listened to and respected -


Mohamed Shafik
Shafiq says that a "tiny minority" of Pakistani men feel white girls are worthless and immoral — and can be abused with impunity.
"They know if they took someone from the Asian community, it pretty quickly is going to be found out," he says. "But those white girls are available, so they think they can get away with it."
The men in the Rochdale sex ring were remarkable only in their ordinariness. They were part of British life, but on the fringes — the sort of people most Britons don't really notice when they pass them on the street."

How are we doing so far - more to come
Jim Carroll