Ed Husain’s book on UK Muslims slammed over ‘unverified source’ suggesting 'killings are normal' for refugees
Questions have been raised over the accuracy of self-styled former extremist 's latest book,Ìýafter a local authority in the north of claimed no knowledge of a source cited in the work.
Husain's "Among the Mosques: A Journey Across Muslim Britain"Ìýhas been criticised as "" over alleged factual inaccuracies beginning on its first page, as well as for suggesting, among things, that "self-deport or be deported" or "modernise, integrate... and contribute to Western society".
'No go areas for white people'
In one section of the book, Husain recounts meeting a man named Mahfuz Alimain, who is described as a senior official at Manchester Council. Alimain allegedly told Husain that Muslim refugees in the UK had grown "accustomed" to violence.
"Syrians and Libyans, Yemenis and Palestinians who come to British mosques have seen bombs and destruction daily. Killings are normal for them," Alimain is quoted in the book as saying.
"Peace in Manchester troubles them; they feel they need to seek revenge and justice for the wrongs done to them in their countries."
The excerpt, along with others, were later cited in aÌýwidely-shared article by right-wing UK tabloid The Daily Mail, which includedÌýclaims that parts of Britain were "no go areas for white people".
On Wednesday, however, Manchester City Council said it had no knowledge of an individual named Mahfuz Alimain working for them.
The clarification came in response to a question from British medical practitioner DrÌýSiema Iqbal, who tweeted the council and Husain's publishers asking for further details about Alimain.
"±á¾±Ìý ÌýWho is Mahfuz Alimain? It appears noone seems to know who he is. do you fact check before publishing? Or is this in the fiction section?" Iqbal tweeted on June 7.
Hi
— Siema Iqbal (@siemaiqbal)
Who is Mahfuz Alimain?
It appears noone seems to know who he is. do you fact check before publishing? Or is this in the fiction section?
On Wednesday, Manchester City Council responded:
"Hi Siema, Just to confirm on this, we don't employ a Mahfuz Alimain, nor do we have any record of having employed anyone of this name. Thanks."
The New Arab reached out to Husain and the book'sÌýpublisher, Bloomsbury, via Twitter for comment, butÌýdid not receive a response by the time of publication.
Later on Thursday, however, Husain responded to accusations that Alimain was a "made up character", saying that the name was an alias.
"It’s called an ‘alias’, Ian," Husain wrote in response to a tweet by journalist Ian Fraser.
"Protecting good and brave people from this sort of witch-hunt. Bureaucracy of local government is not the arbiter of truth. Read the book please and then decide," he added.
THREAD: There's (rightly) been some talk about Ed H*sain’s use of fictional characters, or ‘aliases’ in his new book. The ambiguity surrounding individuals he speaks to is only one of many alarm bells that jump out at any reader with a modicum of concern for research ethics.
— Khadijah Elshayyal (@DrKElshayyal)
But the response raised further questions, with someÌýasking why the author did not clarify the use of an alias for Alimain when other aliases are clearly stated as such in the publication.
In another section of the book, Husain claims thatÌýDarwen Council threatens "eviction" for residents who fly the British flag. In a , British Islamic Studies lecturer Dr Usaama al-Azami said he had reached out to the council to clarify the matter, with the council leader responding that the claims were "laughable".
'Countering extremism'
Husain, a former member of Islamist group Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HT),Ìý gainedÌýprominence through his work on extremism and radicalisation.
Along with fellow former HT members Rashad Ali and Maajid Nawaz, Husain founded the now-defunct Quilliam Foundation think thank in 2007.Ìý
Quilliam, which was established withÌýHome Office funding, was criticised by manyÌýBritish Muslims for its reports on faith and race relations.
In 2018, a Quilliam Foundation report claimed that 84% of sexual grooming gang offenders in the UK were Asian, drawing widespread from experts on child sexual exploitation.
A report later released in 2020 by the UK Home Office appeared to debunkÌýQuilliam's claims of an "alarming level of over-representation of South Asian men" among child grooming gangs.
Critics of self-styled counter-extremism experts argueÌýthat the countering violent extremism (CVE) industry has done more to alienate Muslim communities in the West.
"Islamophobia has been a persistent feature in the global north," Tarek Younis, a Middlesex University lecturer who has conducted research into the racialisation of Muslims in counter-extremism policies, told °®Âþµº.
"Following the war on terror and CVE however, long-standing debates regarding 'Muslim integration'Ìýinto Western society have been securitised. What was once 'if you’re not like us, you don’t belong here,'Ìýis now 'if you’re not like us, you’re potentially a security risk'."