The press and abuses of our freedom
I have no idea how the world has suddenly got so complicated. During the dot-com boom and the changing of millennium, we all seemed to be having such fun - I remember how I felt on Dec 31st 1999 - so much hope and optimism.
Yet here we are, 6 years later, the world a place turbulence and unrest; countries fighting illegal wars, journalists abusing their freedom of expression and inciting violence and extremists responding with their vile and totally disproportionate responses.
As a Muslim who has no choice in being British (I was born here, this is the country I know, where else would I go?), I attended the rally in Trafalgar Square, London on Saturday 11th February.
I attended because I wanted to express my anger at journalism’s abuse of freedom of expression and also to show the world that the vast vast vast majority of members of my faith could do so in a way that did not impose on others sense of security and freedom.
There was such an eclectic mix of protesters from every demographic, ethnicity and creed. Punk European students in skirts mingled with hijab strewn Arabian women and it illustrated to me that the vast moderate view of the world was “to live and let live”.
Similarly, all the speakers, be they inspired clergymen from the Church, upcoming Liberal Democrat MPs or much maligned bearded Islamic scholars gave an identical message:
Freedom of Speech cannot mean freedom to blatantly offend or the world ends up in chaos. This applies as much to the people supposedly representing my faith with those heinous pro “7/7” slogans to misguided cartoonists in Denmark as it does to idiotic British fundamentalists such as Nick Griffin of the BNP.
So all in all, it was a joyous day, lots of smiles and positive energy - I felt like we had made progress and the world was a slighter better place because of it.
I bought the UK Sunday Times the next morning expecting them to lead on this major positive story – that in these highly explosive times, 30,000 people had come together and expressed themselves responsibly peacefully.
Imagine my horror and frustration when I saw that the front page was in fact, splashed with a headline that one individual extremist Muslim cleric was again proclaiming the virtues of “7/7”. The concerted efforts of 30,000 people remonstrating for understanding and peace was relegated onto page 2 without even a headline.
And so it finally struck home.
Those with agenda’s only seek disorder and anarchy – hey its sells papers so that makes it OK right? But this was the Sunday Times, a respectable newspaper not seduced by sensationalism? Wrong. How wrong could I be?
It is no longer a mystery to me why the world has ended up where it has.
And one community is to blame.
The press.
I agree that citizens have a right to express freely what they perceive to be the ills of the worlds they live in. Actually it’s the press who need to have this liberty taken away from them.
Because whether they be cartoonists from Denmark or Sunday Times editors, their views do not reflect the views of the vast decent population of this planet we live on. They cannot be trusted to use this liberty with the responsibility that we showed at our remonstration. They just incite for the sake of incitement, and we end up where we are today