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Book Club: Dr Muhammad Abdul Bari's memoir offers a reflection of British Muslim engagement at the highest levels of British public life and should be widely read, writes Sadek Hamid.
Comment: The Rohingya and the Palestinian people have much in common: They have been persecuted, repeatedly displaced, denied citizenship and are now subjected to genocide, writes Nada Elia.
Comment: At its first World Cup match, Saudi Arabia complained of mixing politics with sport, but SWAFF, its new footballing federation, is guilty of just that, writes Anthony Harwood.
Book review: Bassiouni's account of Egypt's revolution is an engaging insight into Egypt's Arab Spring and its aftermath, from the side of state power, writes Laith Saud.
Comment: This is not the first time the demonisation of 'threatening' communities has prepared the way for slaughter, writes Robin Yassin-Kassab.
Comment: The appointments of Javid and Patel show that minorities can succeed in Tory Britain, but only in exchange for abandoning their kind, writes Sophia Akram.
Comment: Many British Nazi collaborators faced no consequences for aiding the enemy, so why the double standards? asks Khaled Diab.
Comment: Leaders of Muslim majority countries must see past their economic ties with China, and collectively call out the repression of Uighur Muslims, writes CJ Werleman.
Fears have been raised that IS is seeking a foothold in the subcontinent. But there is little Shia-Sunni tension in India to exploit, and the group has its eye firmly fixed on the Arab world.
Comment: Oved Lobel asks what's behind the seemingly small numbers of low-tech terror attacks in Russia.