Imam brands Muslim MPs who backed a teacher at the centre of the Prophet Muhammad cartoon row ‘coconuts’

From the Mail on Sunday

An Imam who is demanding the sacking of a teacher who showed pupils an image of the Prophet Muhammad may have broken hate crime laws, a former senior police officer believes. 

Muhammad Adil Shahzad travelled to join protests outside Batley Grammar School in West Yorkshire in March after the cartoons were used during a lesson about blasphemy. He has since made a string of incendiary social media posts, including some that a former Detective Chief Inspector believes fall foul of the law.

Mr Shahzad says he and his followers are ‘fighting an academic war’ against the enemies of Islam, has said people should not be ‘brainwashed by freedom of speech’ and warned that riots could erupt if similar incidents were repeated. 

He also used the derogatory term ‘coconut’ to describe 18 Muslim MPs, including the former Home Secretary Sajid Javid, who backed the teacher.  The slur, suggesting someone is ‘brown on the outside but white on the inside’, has been found in court to amount to racially aggravated harassment.

In media interviews, Mr Shahzad has cut a moderate figure.  ‘All we ask for is a bit of respect,’ he said on one occasion. ‘If one teacher can do it, another teacher can do it five years down the line, and we do not want this to be the case.’ 

But he not only signed a letter in which the Batley teacher – who is understood to still be under police protection – was named, but also condemned MPs who expressed concern about the protests. He wrote: ‘I think there are 18 Muslim MPs, Sajid Javid, only Muslim MPs by name, coconut individuals. If you saw the tweet he put out yesterday, you call yourself a Muslim? We will not accept anything less than a sacking… Don’t be fooled by freedom of speech, no freedom of speech!’

In a sermon posted at the beginning of April, he again referred to the teacher’s use of the cartoons and said: ‘If that incident was to happen here in Bradford, there would be riots on the streets.’

In another sermon, the imam, who founded the Al-Hikam Institute mosque in Bradford, said: ‘We are fighting an academic war and a war of intelligence against the enemies of Islam.’  He added: ‘Words are not enough. Actions speak louder than words…Do not be brainwashed by this freedom of speech.’

Last night, Mr Shahzad clarified that he wanted any actions to be ‘peaceful and democratic’ and apologised for the use of the term ‘coconut’, saying he was unaware that it was racially offensive. In 2010, a black councillor in Bristol was found guilty of racial harassment for using the term against an Asian political opponent.

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