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Thread: Saudi Arabia is chief promoter of Islamic extremism in UK

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    Default Saudi Arabia is chief promoter of Islamic extremism in UK

    The Henry Jackson Society said there was a "clear and growing link" between Islamist organisations in receipt of overseas funds, hate preachers and Jihadist groups promoting violence.

    The foreign affairs think tank called for a public inquiry into the role of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf nations.

    The Saudi embassy in London says the claims are "categorically false".

    Meanwhile, ministers are under pressure to publish their own report on UK-based Islamist groups.

    The Home Office report into the existence and influence of Jihadist organisations, commissioned by former Prime Minister David Cameron in 2015, has reportedly yet to be completed amid questions as to whether it will ever be published.

    Critics have suggested it could make uncomfortable reading for the government, which has close and longstanding diplomatic, security and economic links with the Gulf, particularly Saudi Arabia.

    BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner said he understood the report was "largely finished and sitting on Theresa May's desk", but there was probably a reluctance to publish it because of "embarrassing" content.

    The Henry Jackson Society is a foreign policy think tank that advocates the robust spreading of liberal democracy, the rule of law and the market economy.

    Their report says a number of Gulf nations, as well as Iran, are providing financial support to mosques and Islamic educational institutions which have played host to extremist preachers and been linked to the spread of extremist material.

    At the top of the list, the report claims, is Saudi Arabia, the UK's closest ally in the Middle East and biggest trading partner.

    It alleges individuals and foundations have been heavily involved in exporting what it calls "an illiberal, bigoted Wahhabi ideology", quoting a number of examples.

    In a minority of cases, the report alleges institutions in the UK that receive Saudi funding are run directly from Saudi Arabia, although in most instances the money appears to "simply buy foreign donors' influence".

    Britain has a close, long-standing and sometimes controversial relationship with Saudi Arabia, birthplace of Islam and today the world's biggest oil producer and exporter.

    Annual bilateral trade is worth billions of pounds, UK exports to Saudi Arabia, notably in defence, employ thousands of people in both countries, and there is close co-operation on counter-terrorism.

    But UK and US-supplied warplanes and munitions are being used by the Royal Saudi Air Force to bomb targets in Yemen, sometimes resulting in civilian casualties.

    Saudi Arabia also has a much-criticised human rights record. This has prompted calls from some, including Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, for an arms embargo on Saudi Arabia.

    But Theresa May has spoken of the economic and security benefits of this alliance and has pushed for closer ties with Britain's Gulf Arab partners.

    In a statement, the Saudi embassy in London said any accusations that the kingdom had radicalised "a small number of individuals are baseless and lack credible evidence".

    And it pointed out that the country has itself been subject to numerous attacks by al-Qaeda and so-called Islamic State.

    It added: "We do not and will not condone the actions or ideology of violent extremism and we will not rest until these deviants and their organisations are destroyed."

    The Home Office said it was determined to cut off the funding of extremism but it declined to comment on the think tank's report.

    The BBC's Frank Gardner said the report's release comes at a sensitive time with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt all accusing Qatar of supporting extremism - a charge the report says is hypocritical.

    The think tank also accuses Qatar of links to terrorism, which it denies.

    Arab foreign ministers are meeting in Cairo on Wednesday to discuss possible further sanctions on Qatar, while the Qatari foreign minister will be making his own country's case at a press conference in London.

    Endorsing the report, Labour MP Dan Jarvis said it shed light on "very worrying" links between Saudi Arabia and the funding of extremism and he called for the government to release its report on foreign funding.

    "In the wake of the terrible and tragic terrorist attacks we have seen this year, it is vital that we use every tool at our disposal to protect our communities," he said.

    "This includes identifying the networks that promote and support extremism and shutting down the financial networks that fund it."

    He said the proposed Commission for Countering Extremism, a new body intended to expose examples of extremism in civil society, should make the foreign funding of UK institutions a priority.

    Prime Minister Theresa May, who visited Saudi Arabia in April, has insisted the UK's historic relationship with the desert kingdom is important for British security and trade.

    Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has called for the immediate suspension of UK arms exports to Saudi Arabia because of its human rights record and involvement in military action in Yemen.
    http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-40496778



    Hardly a surprise is it? Neither is the fact that the British Government would rather put safety of Brits at risk than criticize a huge money making relationship with Saudi Arabia. The Saudi government has a deal with their Wahhabi clerics, they give them billions to export their ideology abroad and run the moral police at home, and in return they don't turn against the monarchy. To survive, the Saudis must be seen as champions of the Sunni cause, so long as that cause doesn't become a threat to themselves. Plus they strongly oppose Iran. They'll support militants including ISIS so long as they are kept under control.

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    Hmmmm yeah, but nah.

    Yes, in the sense that the British basically created Saudi Arabia and set up all the Gulf states in the early 20th century, then appeared to develop Islamism for their own purposes like destabilising non-compliant dictators and opposing communism. Did they later realise that their home population needed a bit of destabilisation in the form of false flags and terrorist threats to justify removing the rights of the people?

    If the KSA is supporting Islamic extremism in the UK, British security services probably know about it and are letting it happen.

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