The world has discussed ad nauseum just how much of a threat radicalised Muslims pose to the ‘West’, maybe now we can also start a debate on the opposite phenomena: Extreme right-wingers who are willing to resort to violence out of hatred for Muslims. In the years after 9/11, there has been a marked increase in hate crimes against Muslims across the West. Particularly in Europe, far-right political parties have made electoral gains campigning for a ban on immigration. Anti-Muslim rhetoric by parties like the British National Party has been extreme and it was only a matter of time before their sympathisers decided to use bombs rather than words to express their anger. Islamic militants and far-right xenophobes are cut from the same cloth. Both have a penchant for violence, are extremely insular and want to impose their beliefs on those unwilling to adopt them. So long as they restrict themselves to proselytising, a free society must accommodate them. But when they start carrying out attacks like the ones in Oslo, it is time to take action. After 9/11, US President George W Bush took a “for us or against us” stance, while the Norwegian prime minister has said that terrorists can be defeated with “more democracy” and “more freedom”. In a battle of world views, the latter approach is always preferable.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 26th, 2011.
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