A HARDLINE Islamist cleric who government advisers wanted banned from Britain is scheduled to fly to London this weekend to attend events alongside Muslim community leaders.
The Home Office and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office considered excluding Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, an MP in Bangladesh who preaches violent hatred against the West and is accused of war crimes, last year. But despite a series of e-mail exchanges in September, his visa was never revoked and the Home Office issued no exclusion order.
The Foreign Offices Islamic issues adviser accused Mr Sayeedis detractors of being politically biased and said that his exclusion could jeopardise support from mainstream Muslims for the Governments anti-terrorism agenda.
Mr Sayeedi was last in Britain weeks after the July 7 bombings. Tomorrow he is scheduled to visit a housing fair at the London Muslim Centre, part of the East London Mosque. The mosques chairman, Muhammad Abdul Bari, is the newly elected leader of the Muslim Council of Britain. Mr Sayeedi is then due to attend a rally in a nearby park alongside the MP George Galloway.
In leaked e-mails seen by The Times, the Home Office sought advice from research analysts in the Foreign Office while considering the case for excluding Mr Sayeedi.
Internal messages between advisers discussed the threat that he allegedly posed, and one attached a report from a Bangladeshi human rights organisation. The report quotes Mr Sayeedi as saying that Britain and the US deserve all that is coming to them for overturning the Taleban in Afghanistan.
The e-mail from one adviser, Eric Taylor, continues: He [Mr Sayeedi] has made a particularly offensive comment about Bangladeshi Hindus, comparing them to excrement. He also appears to defend attacks against the Ahmadiya (Islamist) community.
. . . Previous visits to the UK have been reportedly marred by violence caused by his supporters. In 2000, during one of his talks in Oldham, his supporters reportedly attacked and beat up five Bengali elders.
A rally in Banglatown was also attacked and three people, including a 65-year-old, were injured. A Bangladeshi community group wrote to the Prince of Wales in June 2004 appealing for Sayeedi to be banned from the UK.
However, Mr Sayeedis case was defended by Mockbul Ali, the Foreign Offices Islamic issues adviser, who voiced extreme concern about the political bias of sources being used to criticise the MP.
Mr Ali wrote: Websites of groups with a clear agenda/bias is not the way to prove exclusion [if a case does indeed exist].
Despite admitting that Mr Sayeedi was ultra-orthodox and held views we would not endorse in any way, Mr Ali then added: He is someone who has a very big following in the mainstream British Bangladeshi Muslim community and is viewed as a mainstream Muslim figure.
Any steps taken on his exclusion from the UK must take that into account, especially at a time when we require increasing support on the Prevent/Counter Terrorism agenda from British Muslims.
Mr Taylor responded that the file against Mr Sayeedi was thoroughly referenced and disputed whether the exclusion of an extremist cleric would endanger support from mainstream Muslims.
He added: In the Prime Ministers words, the rules of the game have changed. What may have been tolerated pre-7/7 is no longer the case.
However, despite his strongly worded response, no further action appears to have been taken by the Government.
Murad Qureshi, a member of the London Assembly and the Metropolitan Police Authority, criticised the Governments inaction. Ive been saying since the late 1990s that it doesnt help to have characters like him passing through Britain, he said.
The anguish he causes in the Bangladeshi community is not productive and his visa should be revoked. There are some very serious allegations over his head about war crimes.
The e-mails are contained in a document published by the Policy Exchange think-tank. They were leaked to Martin Bright, political editor of the New Statesman and presenter of a Channel 4 documentary, Who Speaks for Muslims?, which will be shown tonight.
Channel 4 was contacted by the Foreign Office and asked not to name Mockbul Ali, but refused because it said that the Government department had not substantiated its claim that Mr Alis safety would be at risk.
When asked why Mr Sayeedi was allowed into Britain, a spokesman said that he could not comment on leaked documents.
He added: We understand the concern expressed over Mr Sayeedis visit to the UK. Mr Sayeedis visit is not at the invitation of the British Government nor do we plan to have any contact with him while he is here and the fact that Mr Sayeedi is here is in no way a signal of support for him or agreement with the views he espouses.
A spokesman for the Home Office said it would not comment on individual cases.
No one from the East London Mosque was available for comment.