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Ummah.com has archives full of
extremist comments and sources which make Ayman al Zawahiri appear like a
feasible Outreach candidate. It's a
viper's nest where Britain's
extremist Islamists - both male and crone - congregate and replenish on venom.
For many years now there have been calls for the site to be taken off the web,
whilst others have argued the site should be continued so extremists can be
monitored there and terrorism can thus be prevented. All critics have
recognised the extremist content on the site and no-one has suggested any of Britain's
financial institutions sponsor such material.
Some dim, fringe, radical
left-wing commentators - who know next to nothing about the subject matter -
have said the site should be left alone because "it's not so bad" (fortunately such chicken-brained quislings are so
marginal they are as good as irrelevant in modern day Britain. No-one responds
to their misrepresentations and public figures have now grasped how a wall of
silence exposes these little weaklings further in their helplessness and wholly-merited
marginality).
So, what the hell is HSBC doing
offering paid advertising for HSBC Amanah (its Sharia banking services arm) on
this vile website? Has this prestigious banking organisation decided that - in
spite of its commitment to British service men and women overseas - Ummah.com's
user numbers are too good an opportunity to pass by? (This seems highly
unlikely from a bank which prides itself on its ethical approach).
Is this merely a case of someone
very busy at HSBC
Canary Wharf's
marketing department signing off on funds given to HSBC's appointed marketing
agency - focusing on the figures rather than the advertising location?
HSBC could argue that its
advertisement is one of many banners splashed across many sites by online
marketers and that it is the online marketers' error for not pointing out to
them the difference between a website serving Britain's peaceful Muslim
community (the vast majority of British Muslims) and a website serving a fringe
group of bloodthirsty, bigoted, crazed, Islamist extremist savages.
The thing is that we checked
with Ummah.com. HSBC knows jolly well that it is advertising on Ummah.com with
its alleged 50,000+ unique users.
We questioned Ummah.com's Sajid
Pandore on September 16th this year, who declares his role at
Ummah.com as a "moderator". Here follow some of his answers (excuse the quality
of his English as English is not his first language).
We asked Mr Pandore which
companies funded the site and he clarified it was "HSBC etc who pay for advertising space and it goes towards the cost of
the expensive rental costs per month". Mr Pandore should know as he
admitted, "No I dont get paid a penny for
what i do over at Ummah forum its just voluntary basis in return i get to use
it as an advertising tool for marketing stuff i do (mailshots, banner
advertising that sorta stuff) 50,000+ members you cant go wrong with that sorta
marketing eh?!" Translation: Pandore is the one who sets up the advertising
links on the Ummah.com site and he gets the likes of HSBC to advertise there.
We also asked Mr Pandore for the
names of the people who run the site. His answer (written verbatim below) was: "Waha Media LTD - I'm sure you can pick that
info up from the net or through public records or whatever, they not radicals
either, mainstream Muslims - I don't associate myself with radicals or people
like that nor do we let ummah as well too much to lose plus we have a lot of
reputable mainstream companies both muslim and non muslim that advertise stuff
with us being associated with radicals have a lot to lose and these companies
that advertise with us if they thought we were radical would not even be
associated with us."
We checked up on Waha Media
Limited (UK Company Number 042469) and it has a registered office located at 17 Holden Avenue, Kingsbury, London, NW9 8HP.
Its administrative contact is listed as Nawaf Ibrahim. Another company called
Pointreward Limited is run from the same (residential) address. Something else
came up about Waha - not for printing here.
Sajid Pandore has openly
admitted that his role at the website has been to police the content and to
ensure the smooth running of the site. Pandore (his words) is "Moderator - meaning someone who tries to
police the forum i.e. dealing with members, outsiders and removing any objectional
/ illegal material on the board that sorta stuff and looking after technical
side of things".
Then perhaps Pandore can now explain
why - three months after we pointed out that Ummah.com was housing extremist
content - there are lectures available on the Ummah Forum from the radical
preacher Abdullah el Faisal dating back to May 2006, extremist Al Muhajiroun
videos dating back to November 2006 and one section entitled "Declaration of War" from April 2007
where a recording of Osama Bin Laden himself is downloadable where Bin Laden is
described as "the honourable Sheikh Usama
bin Laden (may Allah preserve him)" by the contributor. These extremist,
often illegal resources are just some of many housed on the website. They are available on only 56 pages of
resources listed since Ummah.com started - why hasn't he removed this
objectionable, illegal material from the website? How long does it take to go
through 56 pages of resources and remove this material? Why the hell hasn't he
done this?
Mr Pandore is off to Dubai "to run an Arabic music MTV style channel". He has stated "if the police ask for help I'll help" which
should come as great news to extremists who have made Ummah.com their home, as
Pandore logs their IP addresses. This fact has been confirmed by his blogging
friends in several of their little-read blogs and notes. One wonders how soon
Mr Pandore will be leaving Britain.
What for HSBC?
News of the bank's support for a
website that mocks the British victims of Afghanistan
and Iraq
(and their grieving families) is currently doing the rounds of Army, Navy and
RAF forums. A dossier on Ummah.com with verified screenshots of its worst
offences has been sent to the top British Equality charities and organisations,
as well as the relevant Government departments. Letters have been sent to
HSBC's Marketing Department which can be written to at: HSBC Bank PLC,
Marketing Department, Level 33, 8
Canada Square, London, E14 5HQ. (We urge you to pick up your
pen and write a quick letter to them now).
Our hope is that HSBC drops its
advertising campaign at Ummah.com immediately and recognises that advertising
on a site which houses extremist material and attracts the very worst extremist
Islamists in our society is hugely irresponsible. If HSBC's error was a
technical oversight, so be it. Actions speak far louder than words.
If you bank at HSBC then you too
should do a search of Ummah.com - which is easily achievable online without
signing up to the website as a member. If HSBC and others refuse to drop their
advertisements you know what to do - there are plenty of other banks out there
who would not be seen dead on a site inhabited by Britain-hating, Britain-abusing,
extreme Islamist refuse.
Watch this space.
If Ummah.com is going to
continue to exist it will continue to exist without mainstream money - costing
Islamists any money they have to keep the site going. Ummah.com's future is one
where it will have the authorities all over its back until it changes its
contents, moderation and rules to meet the only laws that matter in this
country - which happen to be those made by Britons for those who are in Britain;
whatever colour, background or creed.
As soon as the mainstream
advertising on Ummah.com goes, I urge all of you and all your friends and
family to join up to Ummah.com and overload the website with stories of British
heroism in Afghanistan and Iraq. Then we
will see once again the comfort afforded by these vile virtual havens turn
overnight into merited discomfort and pain.
Dominic Wightman is Editor of the Westminster Journal.
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