Australia Muslim leaders boycott meeting with PM Morrison
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/world-i96120-australia_muslim_leaders_boycott_meeting_with_pm_morrison
Muslim leaders in Australia have boycotted a meeting with Prime Minister Scott Morrison over his recent remarks suggesting that the Muslim community is to blame for terror acts by individual, self-proclaimed Muslims.
(last modified 2024-03-19T13:19:59+00:00 )
Nov 21, 2018 10:23 UTC
  • Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison (photo by AFP)
    Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison (photo by AFP)

Muslim leaders in Australia have boycotted a meeting with Prime Minister Scott Morrison over his recent remarks suggesting that the Muslim community is to blame for terror acts by individual, self-proclaimed Muslims.

In an open letter on Wednesday, Australia’s Grand Mufti Ibrahim Abu Mohamed along with a group of other high-profile Muslim figures rejected an invitation by Morrison to a round-table meeting to discuss the issue of terrorism.

Morrison had earlier singled out Muslim community leaders as having a “special responsibility” to counter “the radical and dangerous ideology of extremist Islam” after a recent stabbing attack in Melbourne by an individual that killed one person.

The assailant had reportedly been inspired by the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group.

“They must be proactive, they must be alert, and they must call this out,” Morrison had said, referring to Muslim leaders, and announcing that he would hold the round-table meeting with them this week.

In their open letter, the Muslim leaders emphasized that they felt “deeply concerned and disappointed” about the remarks made by Morrison and other government ministers “which infer that the [Muslim] community is collectively culpable for the criminal actions of individuals and should be doing more to prevent such acts of violence.”

“These statements have achieved nothing to address underlying issues, but rather, have alienated large segments of the Muslim community,” they wrote.

The Muslim leaders, who head community groups in several Australian states, said they would take part in a later meeting with Morrison if their “views and concerns will be genuinely respected.”

Muslim activists in the country have repeatedly raised questions in the past as to why Australian authorities do not attribute other murder incidents and crimes to the perpetrators’ respective faiths and communities. This is while a number of Australian lawmakers have openly expressed controversial anti-Muslim remarks in the parliament and elsewhere.

SS