Alwaght- A Muslim group in Britain named leading United State presidential candidate as the world’s worst Islamophobe on Saturday for his call to ban Muslims from entering the US.
The Islamic Human Rights Organization (IHRC) named the Republican presidential hopeful 'the world's worst Islamophobe' in an annual event in London, which the group said attempts "to subvert Islamophobia through comedy while addressing a serious and significant issue".
“It is bad enough that anyone can come out with such arrogant, unapologetic bigotry and hate speech but I think what is really frightening is that Donald Trump is supported by such a large number of voters in what is the most powerful nation in the world” IHRC’s Chairman Massoud Shadjareh said in an e-mail.
Trump’s rivals in the 2016 ‘International’ category included Tajikistan, which has instilled a campaign to eradicate conservative Islam, other international nominees listed at the IHRO event on Saturday included the anti-Islam French magazine Charlie Hebdo and Islamophobic far-right Dutch politician Geert Wilders. British Prime Minister David Cameron won in the Britain’s category for his “comments about Muslim women needing to learn English and being ‘traditionally submissive” IHRC said.
The Muslim rights group said that the awards aim “to subvert Islamophobia through comedy and revue while simultaneously addressing a serious and significant issue in a creative manner.”
Trump call to ban Muslims from entering the US led to a British petition calling for the billionaire businessman to be banned from the UK for "hate speech".
The petition was signed by 574,000 British residents and citizens and led to a debate in parliament. Both British Prime Minister David Cameron and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn opposed the ban, and parliament voted against barring him.
Cameron, right-wing columnist Katie Hopkins, Maajid Nawaz, the chairman of think-tank Quilliam, and the British police were all nominated for the title of UK Islamophobe of the Year, with the PM being named at the event for comments on Muslim women being "traditionally submissive".
Last month a top US Muslim advocacy has condemned Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's inflammatory rhetoric after he promoted a hoax tale about Muslims being killed with bullets “dipped in pig’s blood.”
“Donald Trump’s inflammatory rhetoric has crossed the line from spreading hatred to inciting violence,” Nihad Awad, the national executive director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said in a statement.