US Muslims call for more protection amid mosque controversy
By DPA, IANSWednesday, September 1, 2010
WASHINGTON - US Muslim leaders called Wednesday for more protection from law enforcement amid what they described as a wave of “Islamiphobia” over plans to build an Islamic centre and mosque near the site of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
“We ask for extra protection of the Muslim community,” said Nihad Awad, national executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). “We call on local state and federal authorities to provide extra protection for the Muslim community in the next days and weeks based on the kind of hysteria that was seen.”
Several US Muslim groups pointed to protests over the proposed mosque as well as plans to burn copies of the Koran at a Florida church Sep 11. They said organized efforts against Muslims seemed to be escalating.
The FBI should protect houses of worship and find those who commit acts of violence against them, said CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper, pointing to recent acts of vandalism at a mosque construction site in Tennessee.
He said it would not be appropriate however for officers to attend prayer services, rather local police should step up patrols near mosques in order to protect worshippers.
A private initiative to build a Muslim centre including a room for worship - a few blocks from Ground Zero - the site in downtown New York where the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers were destroyed in the Al Qaeda strikes of Sep 11, 2001 - has renewed debate about Islam in US society.
Though most New Yorkers support the rights of the group to worship where they chose, they believe the site should be relocated to a less sensitive location, a recent poll showed.
CAIR released a series of public service television announcements Wednesday showing a Muslim firefighter and Muslim medical worker who responded to the terrorist attacks.