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Thursday 3 April 2008

Muslims are forbidden to kill innocent people

Last year I blogged about the never asked question "Who is innocent". Inayat Bunglawala and Muhammad Abdul Bari of the Muslim Council of Britain were oft heard to say in the days after the London bombings that "we condemn the killing of all innocent people wherever they are" or "Those who seek to deliberately kill or maim innocent people are the enemies of us all. There is no cause whatsoever that could possibly justify such barbarity."

I said at the time "I am not saying that Muhammad Abdul Bari or Inayat Bunglawala are terrorists, I am not saying that they support terrorism within the UK; however I am saying that the question "in your view and in the word of the Qur’aan, what types of people are innocent and what types of people are not innocent?" should be asked of, and answered, by them.

I have just found some video from a while back of an interview with British Mullah Anjum Chaudri in which he answers this question rather revealingly, here's the video...




So to put that in writing, Anjum Chaudri believes that:


"I will never condemn a Muslim brother."


"When we say innocent people we mean Muslims, as far as non-Muslims are concerned they have not accepted Islam and as far as we are concerned that is a crime against God... As far as Muslims are concerned, you are innocent if you are a Muslim, then you are innocent in the eyes of God. If you are a non-Muslim then you are guilty of not believing in God"

"I must have hatred to anything that is not Islam"



Maybe Muhammad Abdul Bari and Inayat Bunglawala could state where they stand on this issue.

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