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10:56am Thursday 12th March 2009 in
A £284,000 Government scheme to prevent Wycombe Muslims becoming terrorists has been slammed in a think tank report backed by Wycombe MP Paul Goodman.
The national Preventing Violent Extremism scheme was failing to have an impact on the community said The Policy Exchange – and could be making matters worse.
Wycombe District Council chose anti-extremism projects and was handed £284,000 of Government cash to put them into action.
It came after terror arrests in High Wycombe in August 2006. Some of the men arrested are now on trial accused of plotting to blow up planes.
Mr Goodman said there was “no proof” the £70m national scheme was having an affect.
The think tank report says: “The problem is that PVE – however well intentioned – isn’t working.
“Not only is it failing to achieve its stated objectives, in many places it is actually making the situation worse.
“A new generation is being radicalised, sometimes with the very funds that are supposed to be countering radicalisation.”
It says the “central flaw” was the belief that moderate Muslims who took the funds could use it to reach out to those vulnerable to extremism.
And it says some of these are “stoking those grievances against British foreign policy” and “underwriting” an anti-Western view.
Councils were not well placed to choose projects to bid for funding, it adds.
It singled out a Wycombe scheme, the Muslimah project, which sought to empower Muslim women’s role in the community.
The report asks: “What if women do not want to play such a role? Can they be citizens outside their Muslim communities?
“What is the prevent strategy doing for those who do not wish to define themselves by their faith?”
Mr Goodman said the think tank was “performing a public service by probing issues relating to extremism so rigorously”.
He said: “There’s no proof to date that the programme is working on a national scale.
“There should be an independent review, as Policy Exchange suggests, to establish if there's any real evidence that it's producing results across the country.”
He said he supported the principle of the scheme but was “deeply sceptical about focusing taxpayers’ money on any particular faith community”.
He did not comment on allegations that the cash could be making the extremism problem worse.
The scheme has previously been attacked by Wycombe Islamic Society, which was today unavailable for comment.
Spokesman Zahid Jawed last year said the fund “inadvertently implies there is a widespread problem of extremism when in fact very few people have ever been involved in such things”.
Yet Councillor Tony Green, responsible for the programme on the council, said Wycombe was a “fairly peaceful, harmonious community”.
He said: “By it’s very definition how do you know if it has ever worked? I suppose you could say it hasn’t worked if you get some incidences of violent extremism.”
Finding those who could fall prey to violent extremism was like finding a “needle in a haystack” he said and it was “too early to tell” whether it was working.
While there are “probably better ways of doing it” he said the cash-strapped council was not in the habit of refusing Government money.
The Wycombe scheme started in 2007. Wycombe projects for 2008-11 are; ]
• Wycombe Youth Action – community cohesion officer, youth forums and workshops £102,660.
• Buckinghamshire County Council – training and development for young people £43,500.
• Action 4 Youth – youth work £8,000.
• Wycombe Race Equality Council – exhibition and workshops £18,000.
• The Karima al-Marwaziyya Foundation – young Muslim women workshops £2,642.
• Jamia Rehmaina Educational Trust – Muslimah project for Muslim women £10,000.
• The Catlefield Oakridge Trust - Muslimah project for Muslim women £9,860.
• Bucks New University – identifying ways of preventing extremism among students £7,000.
• Bucks Association for the Care of Offenders – recruitment of mentors to help offenders settle in the community £3,000.
UPDATE: Wycombe District Council provided an incorrect figure for the Bucks Association for the Care of Offenders. The group was awarded £3,000 and not £33,000. This has amended the overall figure.
Comments(17)
DocD
says...
11:19am Thu 12 Mar 09
300Aylesbury
says...
12:18pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Baba Ji
says...
12:44pm Thu 12 Mar 09
eton
says...
12:59pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Observer of
says...
1:20pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Cop
says...
1:23pm Thu 12 Mar 09
eton wrote:More money earmarked for harebrained PVE scheme for the next 3 years and possibly even beyond?
Your Money Down The Drain - £314,000 – that’s only for 2008 – 2009. 2010 and 2011, the offerings will continue with somewhere in the region of another £700,000 being handed out in just Wycombe. UK wide its around £80 million Folks, don’t bother with the lottery this Saturday – Join the PREVENT Violent Extremism gravy train.
Steve Totteridge Hill
says...
1:26pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Observer of wrote:Perhaps they don't know they got rights under British law?
I am interested that a number of the workshops held were for Muslim women. I guess the rationale might be that although all of the Atlantic Terror plot accused are men, perhaps it is the women who will keep the men and boys in check? Could there be any other explanation?
TVP Cop
says...
1:33pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Observer of wrote:OK – I can help with this one – the individuals tasked with delivering the PVE objectives in Wycombe, the ones tagged as incompetent and lacking any skills by an earlier commentator - are, wait for it – WOMEN.
I am interested that a number of the workshops held were for Muslim women. I guess the rationale might be that although all of the Atlantic Terror plot accused are men, perhaps it is the women who will keep the men and boys in check? Could there be any other explanation?
Baba Ji
says...
1:45pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Steve Totteridge Hill wrote:Oh Yes You Can – become a mentor to help offenders settle in the community – that £33,000 in the bank - Happy Days.
Observer of wrote: I am interested that a number of the workshops held were for Muslim women. I guess the rationale might be that although all of the Atlantic Terror plot accused are men, perhaps it is the women who will keep the men and boys in check? Could there be any other explanation?Perhaps they don't know they got rights under British law? I wonder if I can get my hands on any of that cash?
Cop
says...
2:01pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Steve Totteridge Hill wrote:Steve, this is what you can do to get your hand on that cash:-
Observer of wrote: I am interested that a number of the workshops held were for Muslim women. I guess the rationale might be that although all of the Atlantic Terror plot accused are men, perhaps it is the women who will keep the men and boys in check? Could there be any other explanation?Perhaps they don't know they got rights under British law? I wonder if I can get my hands on any of that cash?
Wycombe
says...
3:28pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Baba Ji
says...
3:52pm Thu 12 Mar 09
TVP Cop
says...
5:18pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Wycombe Wiseguy
says...
9:57pm Thu 12 Mar 09
Steve Totteridge Hill
says...
9:20am Fri 13 Mar 09
Baba Ji
says...
10:21am Fri 13 Mar 09
Steve Totteridge Hill wrote:Here’s a ‘Get Rich Quick’ plan for you.
Thanks to Baba Ji & Cop...I feel a career change coming on, combine the 2 part time jobs as well for £179,160pa
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Slacker says...
11:11am Thu 12 Mar 09
Just because there is no proof, it does not mean it is not working.
I find it hard to imagine how they could ever get proof on something like this.