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–Europe's Tolerance May Soon End
Tough Times for Muslims in Europe
Deutsche Welle
A report by human-rights watchdogs confirms something many Europeans may
have noticed on their own: Life has gotten harder for Muslims in Europe
since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
The International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights surveyed 11 of
the 25 EU countries for its report on discrimination against Muslims in
Europe.
It found that Muslims in these countries have felt increasingly
stigmatized, partly based on the current widespread fight against
terrorism, and partly because of a perceived threat of religious
extremism in Europe.
Verbal abuse, job bias
Helsinki Federation Executive Director Aaron Rhodes said discrimination
against Muslims has risen as the fight against terrorism has
intensified.
"They’re very often subjected to verbal abuse on the street and public
transportation...We found that in France 70 percent of all attacks on
Muslims were comprised of attacks on women wearing headscarves," he
said. "And people with Muslim or Arab sounding names are less likely to
be invited to job interviews."
The report by the International Helsinki Federation, a group of 44 human
rights NGOs that aims to uphold human rights standards, said the 2004
French law prohibiting religious attire in public schools helped
encourage discrimination against Muslim women.
In Sweden and many other countries, studies have shown that people with
Arabic sounding names had a reduced chance of being invited for a job
interview, despite having the same qualifications as other applicants,
the report said.
The report also took the media and right-wing and conservative parties
to task. They have reinforced patterns of prejudice against Muslims,
Rhodes said.
"Media accounts very often use stereotypical and negative
one-dimensional language and they tend to contribute to a popular
perception of Muslims as aliens or dangerous," he said. "The rise of
right-populist parties has a had a distinct impact on debate about
immigration and integration issues in the EU."
Far-right parties in Italy, Belgium and Austria depict Muslim
immigration as a threat to the security and values of EU countries,
according to the report.
'Islam' equals 'terrrorism'?
Rhodes pointed out that in Britain, the media have hailed the country’s
criminal justice system for successfully prosecuting Muslim terrorists,
despite the fact that only three out of hundreds of Muslims arrested
were actually convicted.
In the Netherlands, people believe that Muslim schools undermine
integration efforts, while in Germany, 80 percent of those surveyed
associated the word "Islam" with "terrorism" and "oppression of women,"
Rhodes noted.
Even lobby organizations, such as animal rights groups in Denmark, are
calling for restriction of religious freedoms to ban Islamic and Jewish
ritual animal sacrifice.
Such discrimination could encourage moderate Muslims to join extreme
groups in order to protect their cultural and religious identity, Rhodes
said.
"They challenge the moderate parts of these communities and they
sometimes divide them and threaten them," he said. "And the terrorist
agenda -- which is to obviously create terror -- is also to polarize
society and generate fear. When that is allowed to happen then the
terrorists are winning."
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