A Tory leadership hopeful has accused his rival of being “unwise and insensitive” after saying those who shout Allahu Akbar should be “immediately arrested”.
Mel Stride took aim at his fellow Tory Robert Jenrick over the comments about the Arabic phrase, which means God is great.
He told Sky News: “I think the suggestion of wholesale criminalisation of the words Allahu Akbar is unwise and insensitive.
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“Any threat in the use of these words can only ever be implied in the very rarest of circumstances.
“Context clearly matters hugely here.”
The criticism came as Labour’s Angela Rayner accused Mr Jenrick of “stirring up” the riots which have gripped the UK over the past week.
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Asked about Mr Jenrick’s comments, the deputy prime minister said: “People like Robert Jenrick [have] been stirring up some of the problems that we’ve seen in our communities.
“Actually, what we want to see is communities coming together.”
Mr Jenrick made the remarks in relation to the policing of protests against the war in Gaza, which started after Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October last year.
He told Sky News: “You know, I thought it was quite wrong that somebody could shout Allahu Akbar on the streets of London and not be immediately arrested, or project genocidal chants on to Big Ben and that person not be immediately arrested.
“That attitude is wrong.”
Muslim politicians criticised the Tory former minister, one of six bidding to be the party’s next leader, accusing him of Islamophobia.
Labour MP Afzal Khan said Allahu Akbar is “the Muslim equivalent of Hallelujah” while his colleague Naz Shah the phrase is said by “every Muslim in the world” during prayer and Mr Jenrick should “apologise and speak to Muslim communities and learn more about our faith”.
Following the backlash, the former immigration minister doubled down by posting a video on X of a march through Bolton with people chanting “Allahu Akbar”.
He said: “‘Allahu Akbar’ is spoken peacefully and spiritually by millions of British Muslims in their daily lives. But the aggressive chanting below is intimidatory and threatening.
“And it’s an offence under Section 4 and 5 of the Public Order Act.”
But he was accused of trying to justify what he said rather than apologise by other senior Conservatives.
Baroness Warsi, a former Tory cabinet minister, addressed Mr Jenrick directly on X, saying: “No Robert, you do not get to go on national broadcasters and say one thing and try and pretend you said something else after!
“If you genuinely feel you comments on Sky News were inappropriate, offensive, incendiary and anti Muslim (which they were) then start by apologising.
“Then you can go back to pretending you a responsible candidate for the leadership of our party.”
Former Tory Foreign Office minister Lord Ahmad said the comments “at a time when communal tensions are high fuel Islamophobia”.
“Don’t try and ‘qualify’ your comments – just apologise!”, he said.