Hazel Blears, the UK minister responsible for counter-terrorism, said on Tuesday that Muslims will have to accept as a "reality" that they will be stopped and searched by the police more often than the rest of the public.
Blears told MPs that "there was no getting away from it," because the terrorist threat came from people "falsely hiding behind Islam."
Her comments, on the day when leading British Muslim groups met to hammer out a strategy on maximizing the Islamic vote for the election, provoked immediate condemnation from Islamic leaders.
Massoud Shadjareh, chair of the Islamic Human Rights Commission, said: "She is demonizing and alienating our community. It is a legitimization for a backlash and for racists to have an onslaught on our community."
The Home Office minister's comments come at an awkward time for the Labour government. It is struggling to pass anti-terrorism legislation through parliament and preparing for a general election where the traditionally loyal Muslim vote is threatening to desert the party.
Blears was speaking at the Commons home affairs committee inquiry into the impact of anti-terrorist measures on community relations.
"If a threat is from a particular place then our action is going to be targeted at that area," she said, adding: "It means that some of our counter-terrorism powers will be disproportionately experienced by the Muslim community."
Statistics showed that of the 17 people found guilty of terrorist acts since Sept. 11, 2001, in the UK, only four of the 12 whose ethnic backgrounds were known were Muslim, Shadjareh said.
The usually moderate Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) was in discussions with the Home Office last night about what the minister had meant.
MCB spokesman Inayat Bunglawala said he feared they legitimized anti-Muslim sentiment and warned the minister against scaremongering to drum up support for the new terror laws: "The remarks are thoroughly unhelpful, as we've seen a rise in anti-Muslim sentiment in the UK. It is wholly unacceptable if a government minister is using her office to scaremonger at the expense of our community to ease the passage of legislation designed to curb our civil liberties."
Blears' comments come after Monday night's vote over controversial new anti-terrorism powers that could see suspects subject to house arrest.
The measures provoked a rebellion that saw the government's majority reduced to 14, and yesterday the bill reached the House of Lords.
Blears also cited new Home Office stop and search figures showing that the rise in the number of Asian people stopped under the Terrorism Act was no longer as sharp as those involving white or black people.
Counter-terror stop and searches rose from 21,500 in 2002-2003 to nearly 30,000 in 2003-2004. Those involving white people rose by 43 percent from 14,429 to 20,637; those involving black people rose by 55 percent from 1,745 to 2,704 over the same period; and those involving Asian people rose 22 percent from 2,989 to 3,668.
Blears said the figures may reassure the Muslim community that they were not being unfairly targeted, but she said it was important for the government to develop a broader conversation with the Islamic community than just talking about the terrorist threat.
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