|
|
"The current US administration under [George W. Bush] is perceived as untrustworthy and merely acting in favor of specific interests," said Ramadan.
|
BERN — The US administration has proved
untrustworthy following the September 11 attacks and its response to
the terror act has deepened a gap of mistrust between the Muslim world
and the West, a prominent Swiss Muslim scholar said Tuesday, September
12.
"I think the great majority of Muslim people
around the world expressed their condemnation of what happened. The
feeling is that it was not Islamic and was against our values,"
Tariq Ramadan told swissinfo in an interview.
"But there is a very deep lack of trust
because of what happened afterwards at a global level," said
Ramadan, who is currently working as a senior research fellow at St
Anthony's College, Oxford University, and at the Lokahi Foundation in
London.
Ramadan, who published more than 200 books on
Islam, added that overall perception of the consequences of 9/11 is
quite negative with Muslims in the United States and the West feeling
under siege.
"Over the past five years there have been many
people saying we need more mutual understanding, but since September
11 events around the world have conspired against this," he said.
"There is still this perception in the West
that Islam is a potential threat, not only the extremists and radicals
but Muslims in general," lamented Ramadan, who was appointed to a
British government task force set up to combat radicalization and
extremism in the wake of the London bombings.
He said anti-terror laws in the West and the US
global war on terror with news about rendition flights and torture of
terror suspects have added insult to injury.
The US Senate Office Of Research has said that the
Arab Americans and the Muslim community have taken the brunt of the
Patriot Act and other federal powers applied in the aftermath of the
9/11 attacks.
Amnesty International also repeatedly said that
racial profiling by US law enforcement agencies had grown dramatically
in the wake of the terrorist attacks.
Ramadan himself experienced racial profiling when
he was denied a US visa to teach Islamic philosophy and ethics at
Indiana's Notre Dame University's Kroc Institute for International
Peace Studies.
The US State Department revoked his visa in July
2004 on the recommendation of officials in the Department of Homeland
Security.
A US federal judge criticized last April the Bush
administration for being inconsistent in its handling the visa
application of Ramadan.
Untrustworthy
Ramadan said the US administration has proved
untrustworthy.
"The current US administration under [George
W. Bush] is perceived as untrustworthy and merely acting in favor of
specific interests."
He continued: "Muslims hear the West talking
about democracy and human rights, yet they see that intervention in
Iraq and Afghanistan has not brought democracy and that people are not
being treated in a dignified way."
Ramadan said Muslims and Arabs pinned high hopes on
a unified Europe to counterweight the US hegemony, but woke up to a
European Union following in the footsteps of Washington.
"Europe is seen as having the potential to be
different but instead follows the lead set by the US," he said.
"After [their opposition to] the war in Iraq,
there had been hope that European governments might show another face.
But the war in Lebanon showed that little can be expected from Europe
and that it is not courageous enough to take a stand on the Arab
side."
Europe's heavyweights were reluctant to call for an
immediate ceasefire in the latest Israeli war on Lebanon, echoing a US
stance.
Thirty-three days of massive Israeli air strikes
and bombardment killed up 1, 200 people, nearly all civilians, and
left the country's hard-won infrastructure in tatters.
"Muslim countries believe Israel was
effectively given the green light to kill civilians in Lebanon for
more than five weeks," said Ramadan.
Ramadan, who was named by Time magazine as one of
100 innovators of the 21st Century for his work on creating an
independent European Islam, said the West has to be
"consistence" should it want to turn a new leaf with the
Muslim world.
"You cannot say on the one hand that you are
promoting democracy when on the other you are dealing with
dictatorships," in the Middle East, he said.
"Also this continuous discourse on the
impossibility of integration is pushing Muslims to the margins of
society. In Europe and the United States we still present Islam as
something that is alien, as if we don't have shared values and cannot
live together," he noted.