Islamophobia on the Rise After London Bridge Terror Attack: Police

There’s been an overall increase in the number of racist incidents in London following the attack on London Bridge.

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People hold up a banner during a ‘Unity Vigil’ against racism and Islamophobia in London. Image used for representational purpose. (Photo: AP)
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People hold up a banner during a ‘Unity Vigil’ against racism and Islamophobia in London. Image used for representational purpose. (Photo: AP)
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Islamophobic hate crimes have increased five-fold in London since the weekend London Bridge attack, claimed by the Islamic State terrorist group that killed eight people, Scotland Yard figures revealed on Thursday. Twenty such crimes directed at Muslims were handled by the Metropolitan Police on Tuesday, compared with a daily average for 2017 of 3.5.

The force also recorded an overall increase in the number of racist incidents in the British capital, in the days after three terror suspects rammed a high-speed van into pedestrians on London Bridge before stabbing revellers at the nearby Borough Market, killing eight people before being shot dead by armed police officers.

London's Pakistan-origin mayor Sadiq Khan said:

One of the greatest things about London is our defiant unity in the face of adversity – and that will not change in the aftermath of this horrific attack. Just as the police will do everything possible to root out extremism from our city, we too will take a zero-tolerance approach to hate crime. If you witness a hate crime, please report it to the police. If you commit a hate crime, you face arrest.

Provisional figures released by his office show the number of racist incidents recorded on Monday was 54, compared with a daily average of 38 so far in 2017.

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I’m calling on all Londoners to pull together and send a clear message to the world that our city will never be divided by these hideous individuals who seek to harm us and destroy our way of life. London will never be cowed or divided by terrorism.

Islamophobic incidents have been on the rise UK-wide since the suicide bombing in Manchester on 22 May by Salman Abedi, and the attack on the UK Parliament by Khalid Masood in March. Fiyaz Mughal, founder of anti-Islamophobic helpline Tell Mama (Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks) said:

Terrorists are trying to divide our communities and society. People who target innocent Muslims, who have nothing to do with extremism or terrorism, are playing into the hands of Islamist extremist terrorists. In one recent incident, the words “terrorise your own country” were daubed on the outside of a South London Islamic centre.

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