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Leader of group that held protests in London hails Hamas as 'heroes'

Luqman Muqeem, the leader of Hazib ut-Tahrir said after the October 7 attack on Israel that Hamas were 'heroes' for having 'broken through the enemy lines of yahood (Jews)'. Luqman Muqeem, leader of Hazib ut-Tahrir, has led an extremist group that held pro-Palestine demonstrations in London and praised Hamas for their actions following the Israeli attack on Israel. He also shared questionable posts on his Instagram and Tiktok accounts, including mocking Jewish statehood and suggesting that their promised land is Jahanam (the place of punishment like hell in Islam). Despite protests outside Turkish and Egyptian embassies in central London, the Met Police insisted that no crimes were committed. Home Secretary Suella Braverman has been urged to ban the extremist group, which had pledged to eliminate the zionist entity and referred to'monstrous Jews'.

Leader of group that held protests in London hails Hamas as 'heroes'

Publié : il y a 2 ans par Ryan Prosser dans Politics

A leader of an extremist group that held pro-Palestine demonstrations in London said attacks on Israel 'made us all happy' and branded Hamas as 'heroes'.

Luqman Muqeem, the leader of Hazib ut-Tahrir said the Hamas attack on October 7 'made us all very, very happy'.

Following the attack on Israel, Muqeem described Hamas militants as 'heroes' for having 'broken through the enemy lines of yahood (Jews)'.

He has shared several other questionable posts on his Instagram and Tiktok accounts, including mocking Jewish statehood, saying that their promised land is Jahanam (the place of punishment like hell in Islam).

In another post he appeared to endorse a quote from Imam Abu Haraira suggesting that the 'last hour' would come when the 'muslims fight the Jews' and 'kill them', the Telegraph reported.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman has come under pressure to ban the extremist group, which has held protests outside the Turkish and Egyptian embassies in central London, including chants of 'jihad'.

But despite the group's demonstrations including chants of 'jihad, jihad, jihad' and activists holding placards saying 'zionist murder', the Met Police insisted that no crimes were committed.

Muqeem has represented Hazib ut-Tahrir at six university events in the UK on speaking panels.

Former prime ministers David Cameron and Tony Blair both tried to ban the extremist group which had pledged to 'wipe out the zionist entity' and referred to 'monstrous Jews'.


Les sujets: Social Issues, Protests

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