Keith Ellison also rebukes ban on US money transfers to
Somalia in speech at White House summit on countering violent extremism.
Washington’s first Muslim congressman has publicly rebuked
the Obama administration’s terrorism strategy during a White House summit on
countering violent extremism, warning that recent moves to prevent money
transfers to Somalia risked radicalising its large expatriate community in the
US.
Keith Ellison, who represents a Minnesota district with the
highest Muslim population in the US, also criticised the response to the murder
of three students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, arguing that a failure to
prosecute hate crimes fuelled the narrative that America was at war with Islam.
Ellison’s remarks came on the second day of a summit
characterised until now by vice-president Joe Biden’s claims the US was more
experienced than Europe at preventing extremism because of its history as a
immigrant nation.
But Ellison drew applause from an audience of Muslim
community leaders at the White House with a series of pointed criticisms of the
way the US handles religious minorities.
“The violent extremist makes the case that America is at war
with Islam and Muslims, and we have to assert that this is not true; not just
in word, but in deed,” he said.
“The reason we are susceptible to violent extremism is that
we have not deepened opportunity enough ... economic deprivation makes people
susceptible to being lured and seduced,” Ellison said. “But the other part is
social and legal deprivation as well.”
The congressman said he had flown to the summit with the
“sole purpose of ringing the alarm bell” over a recent decision to prevent US
banks handling money transfers to Somalia.
The move was intended to prevent funding of terrorist groups
operating in east Africa, but has sparked alarm among development experts by
also cutting off an estimated $215m in annual remittances to Somali families
from their relatives in the US.
“On February 6, our financial services system stopped
working with Somali money-wiring services to send money to Somalia,” said
Ellison. “This is important because in the region, the violent extremist wants
to be able to say ‘See, they won’t even let your relatives send you money.’
They want to be able to say that and we have got to be able to stop them from
saying that.”
He also joined a growing chorus of voices expressing concern
at the relatively slow response and limited public reaction to the shooting of
three Muslim students, which police initially claimed was over a parking
dispute, but had now sparked an FBI inquiry due to the alleged anti-religious
views of their killer.
“It’s important that law enforcement prosecute hate crimes
against Muslims … It’s important that we at least admit that what happened in
Chapel Hill probably was not only about a parking space,” said Ellison.
“This defies our sense of logic and common sense. This
actually helps to support the false narrative of violent extremism; they want
to make the case that America hates you, is against you, join us.”
“Razan, Yusor and Deah – the three victims – were living,
walking, breathing examples of countering violent extremism until their lives
were taken away,” added the congressman. “Let us not slip into a mistaken idea
that terrorism is somehow a Muslim idea.”
In the first of two speeches to the summit, Obama later
echoed the concern over the killings in North Carolina, though did not directly
address the question of the murderer’s motive, preferring to emphasise the
solidarity of other Americans.
“Most recently, with the brutal murders in Chapel Hill of
three young Muslim Americans, many Muslim Americans are worried and afraid and
I want to be as clear as I can be: as Americans of all faiths and backgrounds,
we stand with you in grief and we offer our love and we offer our support,” he
said.
The president also reiterated his determination to avoid
letting the counter-extremism agenda become characterised as a battle against
Islam, saying this would be playing into the hands of terrorists and the
Islamic State.
“They propagate the nation, the American, and the West
generally, is at war with Islam; that’s how they recruit, that’s how they try
to radicalise young people,” he said.
“We must never accept the premise that they put forward
because it is a lie. Nor should we grant these terrorists the religious
legitimacy that they seek.”
Earlier in the summit, Sheikh Sa’ad Musse Roble, a
Minneapolis imam, introduced a session examining the city’s attempts to counter
violent extremism by reading a passage from the Qur’an on the sanctity of human
life.
The summit, which will be addressed by Barack Obama later on
Wednesday and Thursday, was also attended by the mayor of Paris, and British
home secretary Theresa May.
Ellison concluded it was important the democracies show
equal treatment to their citizens if they wish to avoid radicalising
disaffected young minorities.
“The best defence to violent extremism is to adhere to our
values. So that when a young person who could go one way or another is walking
around Minneapolis wondering ‘What should I do’, and they are hearing that
America’s at war with Islam and maybe that’s true because I don’t have a job
and I can’t send money to my family … if we adhere [to our values], respect the
faith of all and include more people we will have a safer, better community,”
he said.
Credit to Dan Roberts
No comments:
Post a Comment