Ali

2.6K posts

Ali

Ali

@AliFazel12

London, England Katılım Haziran 2013
1.3K Takip Edilen851 Takipçiler
Ali retweetledi
Saqib Bhatti MP
Saqib Bhatti MP@bhatti_saqib·
Hi Richard this is you last week with Phil Tierney who among other things has said Muslims like me shouldn’t hold public office and all mosques should be closed. Cllr Gethen turned up to one of my constituency events even though she isn’t a constituent and clearly was there to cause trouble. I had a private conversation with her and challenged her on her support and endorsement for Tierney. In fact I think I said “you need to sort the racism in your ranks.” She doubled down on her support for Tierney and then left. I had a number of SEND events that day with my constituents and will continue to do so in the future. I will go toe to toe with any Reform politician and will not stop standing up for parents and children with SEND and I won’t shy away from standing up to racism. Perhaps now, Richard, you can find your voice and finally condemn the racism by Tierney … although given your performance on Kuenssberg I won’t hold my breath dailymail.com/news/article-1…
Saqib Bhatti MP tweet mediaSaqib Bhatti MP tweet media
Richard Tice MP 🇬🇧@TiceRichard

Appalling by Tory MP ….

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Saqib Bhatti MP
Saqib Bhatti MP@bhatti_saqib·
This is Tice with Phil Tierney last week. Tierney was elected on Friday. Reform in Solihull cheered when he was elected despite him being under investigation for saying all mosques should be closed, Muslims shouldn’t hold public office, being supportive of Tommy Robinson and sharing Britain First posts. dailymail.com/news/article-1…
Saqib Bhatti MP tweet media
James Cleverly🇬🇧@JamesCleverly

This headline makes it sound as if the Reform Cllr wanted Nigerians to do the road maintenance. The actual quote was “the amount of Nigerians in town. Should melt them all down and fill in the pot holes!!” How on earth could Tice not bring himself to condemn that?

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Ali
Ali@AliFazel12·
@RmSalih Might have something to do with the fact that both yours and the 5Pillars account do absolutely nothing to promote unity and harmony between Muslims and Britain and so you’re just not taken very seriously. There are many more rational voices the govt would probs rather listen to.
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Roshan M Salih
Roshan M Salih@RmSalih·
I am not grateful in the slightest to the Home Office or to Shabana Mahmood for banning Valentina Gomez. Nor will I say thank you. This decision should have been made in five minutes. The same amount of time it took to ban Kanye West. Instead of that I personally spent the last ten days tweeting non stop about this, 5Pillars did several articles, graphics and videos, we were fobbed off by the Home Office itself, then Muslim influencers got involved as well as organisations and MPs. In other words it was a hard slog for something so obvious and easy to do. And that 10 day delay has not gone unnoticed by British Muslims.
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Albie
Albie@albieamankona·
The @ukhomeoffice is a joke & so are all those who called for Kanye west to be cancelled for antisemitism & not @ValentinaForUSA for Islamophobia. You are all a disgrace, don’t complain about “two-tier” anything again, either Kanye & Valentina should be allowed in or both banned.
Valentina Gomez@ValentinaForUSA

VISA APPROVED. See you on May 16th in England🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 @Keir_Starmer @ShabanaMahmood @ukhomeoffice you’re only good at protecting the muslim rape gangs. Try to arrest me & see what happens. England belongs to the English. Not the mohameds.

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Andy Street
Andy Street@andy4wm·
Back in 2017 we said we’d get this done. Plenty doubted it. But once the funding was secured in 2021, it was never in doubt. Good to see it finally delivered, thanks to everyone who played a part to bring trains back to the Camp Hill line after more than 80 years.
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Ali@AliFazel12·
@RichParkerLab It’s laughable seeing you trying to take credit for this - not much else he can claim to have achieved so you’re riding on Andy Street’s coattails
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Richard Parker
Richard Parker@RichParkerLab·
Today is a great day for Birmingham as passengers ride on the Camp Hill line for the first time in 80 years. When I took over, the project was heavily delayed and over budget. We got a grip, and the fantastic team worked around the clock to get delivered.
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William Dalrymple
William Dalrymple@DalrympleWill·
It was not just Trump who revealed himself yesterday. The total silence from @Keir_Starmer and his apology for a cabinet in the face of Trump's genocidal threat to Iran, even as they took immediate concrete action to ban Kanye West/Ye, reveals deep and profoundly troubling double standards. As we saw repeatedly with Gaza, the mass slaughter of Muslims really doesn't bother to our government; now even the threat of complete civilisational erasure is not worth a passing comment. Starmer just shrugged and let the B-52s take off with all their bombs primed and ready to drop on civilian targets. A total and irredeemable disgrace.
Mark Seddon@MarkSeddon1962

You come to the reluctant and sad conclusion that even a threat to wipe out a civilisation by an unhinged US President is still not enough to elicit any serious push back from the Prime Minister or his Cabinet. What have we become? theguardian.com/world/2026/apr…

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William Dalrymple
William Dalrymple@DalrympleWill·
Entirely misses the point that it's a death penalty that only applies to one ethnicity, the Palestinians, a people who are illegally occupied, living under military rule and subject to dispossession, constant violence and ethnic cleansing
Yvette Cooper@YvetteCooperMP

My statement with France, Germany and Italy on our united opposition to Israel’s death penalty law. The death penalty is wrong and we oppose it around the world. gov.uk/government/new…

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Ali
Ali@AliFazel12·
Sad to see @JamesCleverly, once the future of a progressive Conservative Party, choosing to peddle the ludicrous claims that segregated prayer is somehow about Muslim women being ‘second class citizens’. Looking physically uncomfortable trying to spout absolute rubbish #bbclaurak
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Mehdi Hasan
Mehdi Hasan@mehdirhasan·
Mehdi Hasan tweet media
Nadhim Zahawi@nadhimzahawi

Clearly you and @mehdirhasan are either clueless or playing useful idiots for the Iranian regime. Expecting a great negotiator like @POTUS—who thrives on unpredictability—to telegraph strategy is absurd. Tweet less—you’re making yourself look like a twat. 👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽

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Ali
Ali@AliFazel12·
How far we’ve allowed this party to fall… Astonishing ignorance. For centuries religions of all kinds participate in segregated forms of worship. To spin this as an issue of minority women being pushed aside is absurd and plain stupid. What a mess.
Farrukh@implausibleblog

Kemi Badenoch disaster of an interview criticising the Ramadan Tent Project's Iftar at Trafalgar Square is something to behold 😅 @RamadanTent did it without objection under 4 Conservative PMs: 2015 under David Cameron 2019 under Theresa May 2022 under Boris Johnson 2024 under Rishi Sunak Gary Gibbon, "What is your objection to the Muslim prayer that happened in Trafalgar square" Kemi Badenoch, "As a woman from an ethnic minority background, I do not like to see women shoved to the side, segregated, in an event that is not welcoming to others" "Trafalgar square is a public space which we use for inclusive events" Gary Gibbon, "But the event was welcoming. It was inclusive. It was inviting other people to come and see what the moment was like" *Badenoch's eye lashes flash faster than a butterfly chasing nectar* Kemi Badenoch, "A segregated event like that, I do not think the Mayor should be party political" Gary Gibbon, "So gender segregation is your objection?" Kemi Badenoch, "Yes, but more than that" Gary Gibbon, "But lots of religions have gender segregation" Kemi Badenoch, "Not in public spaces. This is not about freedom of religion" Gary Gibbon, "The Ramadan Tent project organised events at the Victoria & Albert museum, in front of the Royal Albert Hall, under Conservative administrations" "They've been developing this public way of showing their faith and inviting people to come and observe it" Kemi Badenoch, "Without knowing the details of those events, I'm not making a comment" "I'm taking a specific event about that type of mass prayer, segregating women in the middle of Trafalgar square" "We believe in religious freedom, that doesn't mean any religious practice in every single religion" "Sometimes the authorities need to set guard rails and say actually this is too much"

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David Henig 🇺🇦
David Henig 🇺🇦@DavidHenigUK·
Just a few generations ago most of my family were slaughtered because politicians in Germany said similar things about Jews that are now said about Muslims in many countries. Attempts to whip up a war on islam are pure evil and need to be called out as such.
Danny Kruger@danny__kruger

Nick Timothy and Nigel Farage are right, and Sadiq Khan and Keir Starmer are wrong. Small groups of people, of whatever religion, praying in public places is fine. And as a Christian country we should allow a special privilege for churches to lead services in our national spaces, like the Palm Sunday celebration that happens in Trafalgar Square. What we don't want is mass ritual observances intended to claim the civic realm for another religion, or assert the domination of another culture over our own Christian traditions. What happens in our national spaces is not neutral. People use Trafalgar Square, for celebrations and demonstrations, to make a point about the kind of country they want us to be. The Palm Sunday pageant reminds us of who we are - not as individuals (many or most of us don't identify as Christians at all) but as a national community, with the roots of our institutions in the ground of the Bible and our most solemn communal moments, from coronations to funerals, mediated through the liturgies of the Church. A mass Adhan held there, or in any town square, is making a different point: that Britain is not a Christian country, and that - inshallah - one day it shall be Muslim. This is unacceptable to the British public and indeed incompatible with our constitution. As ever with these debates, the issue is partly one of kind and partly one of degree. There is an issue with Islam itself as a religion which in most interpretations does not admit of pluralism or freedom of conscience, and therefore is inherently aggrandising, including over territory. But with a bit of confidence and a bit of toleration we could handle that - if it were not for the issue of degree. It is the scale of Islam in Britain, and the ambition of its leaders for greater scale, that makes the problem. The numbers of people who assembled for the adhan in Trafalgar Square, clearly and openly claiming the territory for a faith with no connection (indeed, with strong doctrinal disagreement) with the model of Western liberal democracy that Britain has developed and exported to the world - that is the problem. The numbers, whether everyone there understood it this way or not (and I suspect many did), convey an explicit threat to the foundations of our country. Being relaxed about other people's religion is a good thing, a very British thing. I don't mind modern druids dancing around Stonehenge in my constituency (arguably, though the historicity is tenuous, they have a claim to the place). I don't mind small groups of Hindus or Buddhists or Muslims demonstrating the reality of Britain's religious toleration by worshiping in Trafalgar Square. But let's not kid ourselves about this adhan, or pretend that we're just seeing another harmless expression of Britain's religious diversity. We are seeing an abuse of liberalism, led by people who are not themselves liberal; or - let us imagine they are acting in good faith - who are themselves deceived about what they are doing. It should not happen again. And it would be good to hear the Church of England say so.

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Saqib Bhatti MP
Saqib Bhatti MP@bhatti_saqib·
Happy Eid to everybody celebrating. I wish you all lots of peace and blessings during this special time.
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dan barker
dan barker@danbarker·
If you want to know what Nelson thought of Muslims, you may want to factor in Nelson's column. See that thing on his hat? It is a 'chelengk'. Nelson was the first non-Muslim to be awarded one - as thanks for his victory in the Battle of the Nile. It was gifted to him by Sultan Selim III, who was literally the Caliph at the time. Nelson was so proud of it, as well as wearing it on his hat, he added it to his coat of arms. It is now the literal highest point of Nelson's column - a gift from the leader of the Muslim world to a devout Christian.
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Nigel Farage MP@Nigel_Farage

What we witnessed in London at the historic Trafalgar Square, in a country built on Judeo-Christian values, was a group of people attempting dominance over our capital city and our culture. We are not going to surrender everything that was built over centuries and defended at great cost in two world wars for us to be a free, independent nation. The British people will not put up with this any longer — simple as.

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