The hypocrisy is breathtaking.
Last night a group of 150 anti-Islamic campaigners stormed a council meeting at the Bendigo Town Hall. The meeting was cut short when the protest couldn’t be managed and the councillors left under police escort.
“I was quite numb being escorted out by police, I just think that that would never have happened during my mayoral term, but it has,” Bendigo Mayor Peter Cox told the ABC. “There was so much noise and protest that we couldn’t continue the meeting, so I adjourned the meeting for about half an hour and the police were called and at that time, there was so much yelling we just couldn’t continue.”
The point of contention is a planned mosque. Last year a $3 million mosque was approved by the local council in East Bendigo, despite fierce opposition from some local residents. Just last month, an area in Bendigo had to be shut down due to a protest led by the anti-Islam group United Patriots Front (UPF).
Last year users on a Facebook page opposing the mosque (which has since been removed), say the mosque’s very existence will prompt ‘a Muslim rising’, a ‘violent jihadi takeover’ and will leave Bendigo at risk of ‘death from suicide bombers and terrorists’.
And yet what is creating the tension and uncertainty for local residents? These protests.
The view perpetrated by the media and embraced by too many in the western world is that Islam is something to be feared. That view is reinforced daily as we see violent, oppressive or sexist acts committed in the name of Allah broadcast in glaring technicolour and with shocking clarity onto our TV screens.