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Arab News
Editorial:
Islamophobia in Russia
5 August 2003
In Russia, Islamophobia is never far from the surface, but it is worse
than at any point since the fall of communism — and the government
is doing nothing to stop it. It resurfaced with the war in Chechnya,
and has increased with every new attack attributed to Chechen terrorists
the 1999 Moscow apartment block bombings, last years theater siege
in
the capital, and most recently last month s suicide attack by two female
bombers at a rock concert which left at least 15 dead — except
that it is not just Chechens who are blamed. All the country s Muslims
have become the target of Russian hate and fear.
Russian Islamophobia is now rampant; even the press join in, with pictures
of local Muslim leaders deliberately positioned next to ones of Osama
Bin Laden. Russian Muslim leaders talk of a “wave of reprisals
sweeping over the community since the rock concert bombing, with police
seeing every Muslim female in religious attire as a “shahid terrorist
. That certainly was the case two weeks ago when a Muslim woman from
London, wearing a head scarf, was thrown out of a cafe in central Moscow;
her complaints to the police only resulted in being detained herself.
Far from doing anything about it, the Russian government is as guilty
all the way up to President Putin. While at times he has said Islam
has no links with terrorism and is a peaceful religion, there have been
occasions when he has been blatantly anti-Muslim, linking the war in
Chechnya to a wider one between Islam and Christianity. Last year he
told a French reporter that “if you are a Christian, you are in
danger, and suggested the reporter be circumcised.
Those who try to counter the anti-Muslim trend are themselves in danger.
A journalist in the Orenburg region, Farid ugumanov, found himself under
investigation as a possible terrorist and lost his job when he wrote
an article criticizing a decision to build an Orthodox church next to
the Muslim cemetery in his Muslim village. The situation is now so bad
that a week ago the co-chairman of the Russian Council of Muftis demanded
action from the Russian authorities to end to the harassment and incitement
of ethnic hatred. We echo that demand. But other than that there is
almost nothing people here can do. We cannot help Russia s Muslims
materially; to do so would result in them being accused of being
in the pay of foreign organizations.
There are some 20 million Muslims in the Russian federation; seven of
its states have Muslim majorities. It does not take a great deal of
intelligence to realize that if the system continues to demonize them,
they will become alienated. Far from solving Russia s separatist problems,
it is going to make matters much worse.
Copyright: Arab News © 2003
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