An Australian Muslim council has called for taxpayer-funded “safe spaces,” so young Muslims can express “inflammatory” views without fear in a move slammed yesterday as troubling and wrong.
News of the request comes just days after a fatal shootout in Melbourne claimed by the Islamic State group, which is being treated as a terrorist incident.
In a submission to a parliamentary inquiry into freedom of religion, the Islamic Council of Victoria demanded funding for federal counterterrorism and anti-extremism programs be diverted to create the refuges.
“Existing ... funding re-allocated to create safe spaces urgently needed by Muslim youth to meet and talk about a range of issues in emotional terms,” it said. “[A space] where they can be frank and even use words, which in a public space would sound inflammatory.”
Victoria State Premier Daniel Andrews said he was “very troubled” by any suggestion for safe spaces where Muslim youth “could be radical.”
“There is no safe way to rail against the West,” he told reporters. “There is no safe way to rail against the values that we hold dear.”
“I am very troubled by the suggestion that we might have a space where people could be radical as part of a deradicalization program. That makes no sense to me whatsoever,” Andrews said, adding that he ruled out any funding for such an initiative.
The council argued in its submission that the rise of right-wing extremist political rhetoric had created “a culture of surveillance for our families.”
“Muslim youth especially are watched everywhere, every day, and this 24/7 surveillance is becoming internalized and leading to serious mental health issues for many Muslims and increasing family tensions,” it said.
The council added that words were frequently seen as “more of a crime than actions” and this limited young people’s freedom “to express themselves in ways that do not apply to non-Islamic faith youth.”
A man of Somali background on Tuesday was killed in a gun battle with police in Melbourne when he opened fire following an hour-long standoff after taking a female escort hostage.
It is alleged that the 29-year-old man, named Yacqub Khayre, who is also linked to a 2009 terror plot targeting an Australian army barracks, had first murdered a Chinese-born Australian man.
Australian officials have grown increasingly concerned over the threat of extremist attacks and have prevented 12 on home soil since the threat level was raised in September 2014.
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