Tag: Britain

  • Islamic State Makes Threat Against Britain’s Four-Year-Old Prince George, Royal Family Will Not Be Spared

    Islamic State Makes Threat Against Britain’s Four-Year-Old Prince George, Royal Family Will Not Be Spared

    LONDON: Islamic State militants have allegedly made threats against Britain’s four-year-old Prince George, British media reported on Sunday (Oct 29).

    Through encrypted instant-messaging app Telegram, a photo of the preschooler was shared with the message: “Even the royal family will not be left alone”.

    The photo allegedly shows the boy standing in front of his South London School, Thomas’s Battersea with the message, “School starts early”.

    The Daily Star reported that the encrypted transmission also had Arabic words which translated to: “When war comes with the melody of bullets, we descend on disbelief, desiring retaliation.”

    Cybersecurity expert Barry Spielman told the Daily Star that “these threats are to be taken seriously” according to his intelligence.

    “This threat to Prince George is chilling,” he added.

    It is not the first time the British royal family has been threatened by the Islamic State. Last month, an IS fighter believed to be from Singapore challenged Prince Harry in a propaganda video to “come and fight us if you’re man enough”.

    In 2015, IS threatened the queen in the runup to celebrations marking 70 years since the end of World War II.

    Telegram is believed to be popular with Islamic State sympathisers, who use chatrooms with hundreds of members, besides holding private conversations.

    In July, Indonesian authorities blocked access to some Telegram channels saying that some forums were “full of radical and terrorist propaganda”.

     

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/

     

  • A Singaporean Stranded – Not Granted British Residential Status Even Though She Married A Briton And Stayed There For 27 Years

    A Singaporean Stranded – Not Granted British Residential Status Even Though She Married A Briton And Stayed There For 27 Years

    She is a Singaporean who is married to a Briton.

    Together, they have lived in Britain for 27 years and have two grown-up sons who are British citizens. Even her granddaughter was born in England.

    But now Irene Clennell, 52, who lived with her husband in Country Durham, faces deportation after being detained during a routine appointment in January at an immigration reporting centre in Middlesborough, reported BBC.

    While Mrs Clennell was given indefinite leave to remain in Britain after her marriage, it appears as if periods she spent in Singapore caring for dying parents was the deal-breaker which revoked her residential status, added the report.

    Before her arrest. Mrs Clennel told the BBC: “The kids were born here, my husband is from this country so I don’t see what he issue is. But they keep rejecting all the applications.”

    She told reporters last year: “I have got no family in Singapore and I have no property in Singapore. My parents are dead. My only family is a sister, and she is working in India. My husband is British. I do not see why I cannot stay.”

    She told BBC she had made repeated attempts – both in Singapore and back in the UK – to re-apply for permission to live with her husband.

    The Clennels tied the knot in 1990. Mrs Clennell does not claim state benefits and is not allowed to work. Mr John Clennel, 50, who is a gas engineer is in poor health, reported the Daily Mail.

    Irene said she was her husband’s primary caregiver.

    She added: “My granddaughter – I want to see her grow up. And my husband is not getting any better. I want to be with my family. If I do go back, I don’t know when I’ll be able to see them again.”

    Mr Clennell told BBC: “Since Irene’s been detained, my mum’s been coming over to get my meals and so on.”

    He told BuzzFeed: “I just can’t believe this is happening. It’s a disgrace. She hasn’t claimed any benefits here and I’ve worked nearly all my life, so I can’t see what the problem is. She doesn’t cost the state anything.”

    Director of UK’s Migrant Voice Nazek Ramadan said Clennell’s case is one of the many cases of how arbitrary policies “tear apart families and ruin lives”.

    “These kind of bureaucratic decisions are a direct result of a relentless drive towards unrealistic migration caps that don’t take real lives into account.”

    When asked for a response, the Home Office told the media: “We do not routinely comment on individual cases.”

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • Prince Charles: Why Radicalised Muslims In UK Fail To Integrate?

    Prince Charles: Why Radicalised Muslims In UK Fail To Integrate?

    The Prince of Wales has expressed his alarm at the number of young people in the UK being radicalised and queried why the British values are failing to be taken on board by children who grow up and are schooled in the UK.

    Charles partly blamed the growing number of people joining extremist organisations on the attractions of danger and adventure, but said the “frightening part” was the role of the internet.

    The interview with BBC Radio 2’s Sunday Hour was recorded before Sunday’s six-day tour to the Middle East, where Charles is due to hold talks with Jordan’s King Abdullah II.

    This week, Jordan pledged to ramp up military efforts against Islamic State (Isis) after one of its pilots, Muadh al-Kasasbeh, was captured in December and burned alive in a cage recently by the militant group.

    On Sunday morning, Charles visited the Za’atari refugee camp, 30 minutes from the Syrian border, home to 85,000 people displaced by the civil war. He was accompanied by the UK’s development secretary, Justine Greening, who pledged £100m in aid to help feed, clothe and shelter civilians caught up in the conflict.

    UK security services fear 400-600 people fighting for Isis and other jihadi groups in Syria and Iraq are British citizens. At least 30 of them, one as young as 17, are known to have died during several years of conflict.

    Asked about radicalisation in Britain, Charles told Diane Louise Jordan, Sunday Hour’s presenter: “Well of course, this is one of the greatest worries, I think, and the extent [to] which this is happening is the alarming part.

    “And particularly in a country like ours where, you know, the values we hold dear. You think that the people who have come here, born here, go to school here, would abide by those values and outlooks.

    “The frightening part is that people can be so radicalised either by contact with somebody else or through the internet … I can see I suppose to a certain extent, some aspect of this radicalisation is a search for adventure and excitement at a particular age.”

    In recent days, Clarence House has been under pressure to deal with claims made in an unauthorised biography of Charles by a US journalist, Catherine Mayer. The book described Charles’s court as so riven by infighting that it is known by insiders as “Wolf Hall”, after Hilary Mantel’s fictional portrayal of Thomas Cromwell’s devious machinations on behalf of King Henry VIII.

    Regarded as an outspoken heir-apparent on a variety of subjects including architecture, the environment and alternative medicine, Charles’s latest foray into political issues of faith and integration raises further concern that he is likely to remain as vocal when he ascends the throne.

    During the Radio 2 interview, Charles also suggested that should he become king he would still be sworn in as Defender of the (Anglican) Faith, following years of speculation the title could be changed to encompass all faiths. “I said I would rather be seen as ‘defender of faith’ all those years ago because … I mind about the inclusion of other people’s faiths and their freedom to worship in this country,” he said. “And it always seems to me that while at the same time being defender of the faith you can also be protector of faiths. You have to come from your own Christian standpoint, you know, in the case I have defender of the faith and ensuring that other people’s faiths can also be practised.”

    Charles added that he had “deep concerns” for churches in the Middle East and feared there would soon be very few Christians left in the region.

    “It’s a most agonising situation but then I suppose we must remember that all around the world there is appalling persecution going on,” he said.. “I think the secret is we have to work harder to build bridges … despite the setbacks and despite the discouragement to try and build bridges and to show justice and kindness to people.”

     

    Source: www.theguardian.com

  • Facilitating Interfaith Marriages in Britain

    Facilitating Interfaith Marriages in Britain

    Christian pastors and Muslim imams have come together to draw up guidelines detailing advice on how to deal with inter-faith marriages.

    Although marrying between faiths is entirely legal in Britain, couples often face resistance and hostility, both from family members and religious leaders. Occasionally both Muslims and Christians feel pressure to convert to another’s faith in order to avoid fallouts and ostracism.

    The new guidelines by the Christian-Muslim forum reinforce the need for religious leaders to accept inter-faith marriages and warn that no one should ever feel forced to convert. The publication of the document, which will receive a high-profile launch at Westminster Abbey today, is significant because those supporting it include imams from the more orthodox Islamic schools of thought and evangelical Christians.

    Among those who have signed up to the document include Sheikh Ibrahim Mogra, a prominent Leicester-based imam from the conservative Deobandi school, the Right Rev Paul Hendricks, associate bishop of Southwark Catholic Archdiocese, and Amra Bone, one of the only women in the country to sit in a Sharia court.

    Estimating the number of people in mixed-faith marriages is difficult. The 2001 census suggests 21,000 but demographers believe the figure is considerably higher.

    The document, called When Two Faiths Meet, is the product of months of painstaking negotiations between Christian and Muslim leaders and emphasises the need for tolerance and acceptance of mixed-faith marriages.

    Among the recommendations are speaking out against forced conversions, recognising the legality of inter-faith marriages in British law, non-judgemental pastoral care and a complete rejection of any violence.

    “It might sound a little like we are stating the obvious but it does need to be said,” Sheikh Ibrahim told The Independent. “In reality Christian and Muslim couples often face very challenging scenarios where there is not enough tolerance or the right pastoral care and that can lead to a very damaging and negative experience for them.”

    The Leicester-based imam said clerics were motivated to come up with the guidelines because they were seeing increasing numbers of inter-faith marriages over the years.

    “It’s clearly already an issue and something that will become more and more common,” he said. “It makes sense for pastors and imams to be ready for such situations rather than be left without help of guidelines when they get approached by couples seeking their advice.”

    Those with experience of inter-faith marriages say couples often face a variety of difficulties. In Islam, men are allowed to marry “people of the book”, Christians and Jews. But Muslim women are not allowed to marry outside their faith. Many of the more conservative or evangelical Christian denominations, meanwhile, insist spouses convert or promise to bring their children up as Christians.

    Heather al-Yousef, a counsellor with Relate who married a Shia Muslim man, was one of those asked by the Christian Muslim Forum to give advice for the guidelines.

    “There are, of course, a whole range of Muslims and Christians. Some groups are liberal about mixed marriages, others much more proprietorial. The good news is that Christians and Muslims are increasingly recognising the need to talk about these things. The very fact we’ve got so many people talking is in itself a success.”

    ‘We were shocked by how much we were judged’ harshly and told off’

    Happily married for five years this couple (the man is Catholic and the wife Muslim) struggled to find support

    While we came from different faiths, we approached them in similar ways. Although I was in my 30s and well educated, I was treated as though I was a silly little girl who had got herself into an irresponsible situation which could only be solved by my fiancé converting.

    It was also assumed that although my fiancé was Catholic, his religion was less important and that he likely did not believe in it to the same degree Muslims believed in their religion. We were not asked what drew us together, how we met, how we managed differences. Instead we were judged harshly and told off. We had discussed the option of one of us converting but decided this was not for us.

    We were shocked by how divisive and underhanded some Muslim clerics were. Ultimately, we found a Muslim cleric who saw things the way we did. The counsel he gave us was excellent, focusing as we did on what made us similar.

     

    Source: www.independent.co.uk