The Spectator has been leaked a draft copy of ‘Protecting What Matters’, a document outlining Labour’s new cohesion strategy which is to be unveiled in a cross Government push next week.
The 47-page paper features a crackdown on extremism and names Islamists as the biggest threat to community cohesion. It also outlines fresh demands that new arrivals in Britain seek to integrate and speak good English, described as a “fundamental basis for participating in society and an expectation of those who wish to call the UK home”. It states: “Those who come here must make a genuine effort to integrate into and engage with our shared way of life.” The last census found that more than a million people could not speak English well or at all.
The report states clearly that Islamists are responsible for three-quarters of the police’s counterterror workload and 94% of all terror-related deaths in the past 25 years. The plan also rejects calls, predominantly from British Muslims, for blasphemy laws in the UK.
Following the case of the religious studies teacher at Batley Grammar school, who was forced into hiding after showing caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, the document promises to “stand against those who try to intimidate, threaten and harass others because they are offended by so-called “blasphemy”. We do not recognise blasphemy law in the UK.”
Further powers will be established to close extremist charities and suspend trustees with “unspent hate crime convictions”, to “strengthen monitoring” of non-violent extremism in universities and to exclude hate preachers from the UK. As part of this, there will be rules to ensure that “public bodies do not confer legitimacy, funding or influence on extremist groups”.
But the plans will also raise alarm bells on free speech by outlining new rules to tackle “divisive content” and “ensure trusted news sources are prominent”. Critics fear these measures will be used to silence critics of Islamists or even TV channels like GB News which some Labour people view as too Right-wing. …
The creation of a “special representative on anti-Muslim hostility” is likely to give a prominent platform to an activist voice. Their job will be to “champion efforts across the UK to tackle hostility and hatred directed at Muslims and those perceived to be Muslim”.
Alongside that is a new definition of anti-Muslim hatred, which has been watered down to avoid defining Muslims as a race, but which will still condemn “the prejudicial stereotyping of Muslims, as part of a collective group with set characteristics, to stir up hatred against them, irrespective of their actual opinions, beliefs or actions as individuals”. Critics think this will create a blasphemy law by the back door. ...<<<Read More>>>...
