The recent murder of 50 Muslims in New Zealand has prompted some local Muslim leaders to call attention to certain unresolved issues—including last year’s Carnival plot arrests and the detention of women and children overseas—apart from other security concerns.
This was the feedback yesterday from leaders such as Islamic Missionaries Guild head Imtiaz Mohammed and attorney Nafeesa Mohammed, who spoke following last Friday’s murder of the 50 people at mosques in New Zealand by an Australian man.
Imtiaz Mohammed’s group held a memorial for the victims last Saturday in central Trinidad. At that meeting, Mohammed called the murders a “terrorist attack.
He added: “It shows the world that not only Muslims must be referred to as terrorists. This attack must be used as a catalyst for the way we react to injustices meted out to our Muslim brothers and sisters in other parts of the world.”
Mohammed said following Friday’s terror attack some local groups called for talks with national security officials. A meeting has been scheduled for Wednesday in Charlieville with National Security Minister Stuart Young, police and army representatives and Local Government Minister Kazim Hosein, who is a Muslim.
Nafeesa Mohammed said if invited she would be happy to attend and particularly looked forward to meeting Police Commissioner Gary Griffith since she sees the need for training of police officers.
“Other issues that need addressing include how last year’s so-called Carnival plot was handled. It showed Islamophobia occurred at the expense of citizens’ rights and freedoms and it demonstrated the need for state officials to understand the nuances in the society concerning religious and cultural realities especially Muslims’ own,” she said.
She cited the issue of repatriation of T&T women and children detained overseas following the fall of Isis and the detention of people by Iraqi authorities. She said mechanisms are also needed to facilitate Hajj pilgrimages.
“What happened in New Zealand brings to the fore the need to better understand that terms like extremism, fundamentalism and the like aren’t confined to one religious group. We need to better understand the realities of Trinidad and Tobago because Trinidad and Tobago’s unity in diversity is a story to tell the world,” Mohammed added.
Imtiaz Mohammed said he hoped the talks could touch on permission for Muslims seeking to buy $3 million in foreign exchange for pilgrims to attend Hajj. Appeals were made to the Finance Ministry.