'UK's Muslim women at most risk over Islamophobia'
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UK's first official helpline for victims of Islamophobia (anti-Islamic hate crimes) has found that Muslim women are most at risk of attacks from extremist groups in the country.
The attacks collated by the helpline Tell MAMA (Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks) show that Muslim women were targeted in a majority of over 600 cases.
High-profile female targets have included Jemima Khan, journalist and ex-wife of Imran Khan, Pakistani cricketer-turned-politician, who along with her 14-year-old
son was racially abused with anti-Muslim comments on Twitter in July last year.
The government's communities minister, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, was also threatened online by a member of the right-wing group English Defence League (EDL).
"We are calling on police and politicians to do more to tackle this shameful wave of fear and prejudice. From the internet, to the workplace, the street and even houses of worship, too often Muslim women and men are becoming the target of vile, sometimes violent, abuse," said Fiyaz Mughal, the director of non-profit group Faith Matters.
Mughal's group had set up the helpline with government funding last March to highlight the scale of anti-Muslim hate crimes.
The helpline has chronicled over 632 cases in its first 12 months and led to the arrests of 21 EDL supporters.
Approximately 58 per cent of the cases involve female victims, with far-right British National Party (BNP) or EDL members linked to 54 per cent of all incidents.
This week, Tell MAMA is launching a free smartphone app to support access to the service.
Mughal is now calling for additional funding to keep the helpline going and for police forces to drastically improve their recording of Islamophobic crimes.
"Few police forces even bother to record Islamophobia as part of their reporting systems. More training is needed at a time when police are facing budget cuts," Mughal said.
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