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Nigel Farage condemned over call to ban public prayer for Muslims in the UK

about 22 hours ago
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Muslim leaders have condemned Nigel Farage’s call to ban public prayer by Muslims in the UK as bigoted and warned of a “growing tide of hate” after the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, questioned whether the events fitted “within the norms of British culture”.Farage was speaking at the launch of Reform UK’s manifesto for the forthcoming Scottish parliament elections when he made the remarks.He described as “a wake up call and a warning to everybody” an event in Trafalgar Square earlier this week where hundreds of Muslims and people of other faiths prayed together, before the celebration of Eid.He said the event, organised by the Ramadan Tent Project and attended by Sadiq Khan, London’s mayor, was “an open, deliberate, wilful attempt, not at the private observance of a different religion, but the attempt to overtake, intimidate and dominate our way of life”.The event has happened in the historic square in central London five times before without incident or previous controversy.

Asked by a reporter if he would like to see such events banned in future, he replied: “We wouldn’t want to stop individuals praying but mass prayer is banned in many Muslim countries in the Middle East itself.So, yes, we have to stop this kind of mass demonstration, provocative demonstration, in historic British sites.”Such restrictions vary from country to country, and could be related to political or religious tensions or public safety.The former first minister and SNP MSP Humza Yousaf said: “Nigel Farage seems to have no issues with Christian prayer, Hannukah, Vaisakhi or Diwali all being celebrated in Trafalgar Square.He only has a problem with Muslims praying.

There is a word for that, bigotry.”Yousaf, the UK’s first Muslim first minister, added: “While I have come to expect nothing less from a charlatan like Nigel Farage, I am angry and disappointed that such rhetoric has been mainstreamed from the likes of Nick Timothy MP, a member of His Majesty’s opposition.”Badenoch backed Timothy, her shadow justice secretary, after he claimed that Islamic prayers taking place in public were intimidating and unBritish, with Labour saying the Conservatives had embraced the “gutter” politics of prejudice.Asked if she agreed with Timothy, or with arguments from other Tories that the main worry about the event was about prayers being separated for women and men, Badenoch said: “This debate which Nick is having is not about freedom of religion.It is about how religion is expressed in a shared public space, and whether those expressions fit within the norms of a British culture.

”The Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, said Farage’s remarks exemplified his “toxic, poisonous politics”.“The Farage circus came to town, and once again, he demonstrated that he is a cynical chancer who wants to divide us.Reform are just failed Tories and offer Scotland nothing.”Recent opinion polls have put Reform neck and neck or ahead of Scottish Labour, but a Ipsos Scottish Political Pulse survey on Thursday suggested their popularity was slipping.Shaista Gohir, a crossbench peer and leader of the Muslim Women’s Network UK, said: “When these gatherings are conducted responsibly – without obstructing roads, causing disruption, and with proper safety measures – why then do some politicians seek to ban them?”“The answer is simple: they object to the sight of them.

This reflects a deep-seated hatred toward Muslims.No other faith communities face comparable scrutiny or antagonism from these politicians in the way Muslims do”.Akeela Ahmed, the chief executive of the British Muslim Trust, warned that British Muslims “must not become a political football”.“Words have consequences – and those who genuinely believe in the British values of tolerance, equality under the law and freedom of religion must not allow those values to be cast aside in attempt to marginalise British muslims”.Farage was speaking to a rowdy audience of about 500 supporters at a country club near Glasgow alongside his party’s Scotland leader, Malcolm Offord, as they introduced candidates for the Holyrood elections in May, where Reform UK will stand candidates in all seats.

Launching a manifesto that pledged Reform UK will “make Scotland the most successful part of the UK”, Offord said Scots were “being forced to pay the highest taxes anywhere in the UK” and repeated the promise to scrap Scotland’s six-band income tax system – in which higher earners pay significantly more.Offord said that concerns about social cohesion in Glasgow, the UK’s biggest asylum dispersal area after London, were “not something we are making up”, and the manifesto pledged to restrict who can apply for homelessness support in the city.The manifesto also pledged to scrap all the SNP government’s net zero related targets, subsidies and quangos.
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‘It’s not about punishing’: Five key issues for English rugby to resolve after the Six Nations

Steve Borthwick will be reprieved by the RFU’s review but there are other factors at play from the makeup of his backroom team to the conveyor belt of talentThe Rugby Football Union’s review into England’s least successful championship for 50 years is already up and running with an alacrity that would impress Louis Bielle-Biarrey. And one detail seems clear: barring something spectacular, Steve Borthwick will still be coaching the team this summer. As one well-placed insider put it: “This review is about supporting Steve to make improvements. If change is needed, change is needed but it’s not about punishing him. He’s absolutely going to be in post this summer, there’s no question about that

about 5 hours ago
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Meg Jones to captain England at Women’s Six Nations with Zoe Stratford pregnant

Meg Jones has been chosen to lead England’s world champions in 2026 after the regular Red Roses captain, Zoe Stratford, announced her pregnancy on Wednesday.Jones, who was vice-captain when England beat Canada to lift the World Cup last September, will take over from Stratford for the upcoming Women’s Six Nations. England kick off their campaign against Ireland on 11 April at Twickenham when a tournament-record crowd of more than 60,000 will be in the stands.The 29-year-old centre said: “Firstly, I’m really excited for Zoe and wish her and Strats [Luke, Zoe’s husband] every happiness on their news. It’s a huge honour to have been named captain of the Red Roses

about 6 hours ago
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For Mexico and Canada, injuries are striking just as World Cup hosting duty looms

When Marcel Ruiz slumped into the grass of San Diego FC’s Snapdragon stadium late in the first half of Toluca’s Concacaf Champions Cup game last Wednesday, he seemed to already know. He covered his mouth with his left hand and clutched his right knee – first the back of it, then the front – with his other hand. He turned his head every which way, perhaps hoping that he might scan something or someone who would tell him that this was not in fact happening. That his World Cup on home soil was not already over three months before it was to even start. That Mexico’s injury crisis had not just deepened further

about 7 hours ago
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No Limit: can rap mogul Master P really become an elite basketball coach?

The 55-year-old has is an assistant coach at the University of New Orleans. Now he believes he can take the step up to the top of his sportYou are Arizona State athletics director Graham Rossini, more of a forward-thinking sports executive than a classic campus administrator. The Sun Devils basketball team have just staggered through another middling season, missing the NCAA tournament for a third straight year. You’ve just fired coach Bobby Hurley, but the vacancy isn’t what anyone in the sport would call coveted – not compared to a blue-blood program like Duke or Kentucky, or even the cross-state rival Arizona Wildcats men’s basketball, standard-bearer of the old Pac-10.You could hire another hardwood hero like Hurley, a Duke Blue Devils men’s basketball supervillain whose winning pedigree as a player surfaced only in flashes over 11 uneven years on the sideline

about 8 hours ago
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Sixteen international games and a franchise overseas: is the NFL’s global ambition good or greed?

“Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. And they’re getting hoggy.” When Mark Cuban, then owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, fired that line at the NFL in 2014, he was partly goading and partly gloating.It felt directionally true. The NFL looked bloated, arrogant and vulnerable

about 9 hours ago
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Chess: Scotland’s Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, 15, routs the English in British Rapidplay

Freddy Waldhausen Gordon, a 15-year-old from George Heriot’s school, Edinburgh, came through with a stunning burst to capture the annual British Rapidplay championship in Peterborough with a score of 9.5/11, defeating the top-seeded GM, Gawain Maroroa Jones, in the final round in a must-win game by a checkmating attack where White’s queen and both rooks all invaded Black’s rear rank.Maroroa Jones was in trouble early in the decisive game, soon had to concede rook for knight, and a second loss of the exchange followed at move 32. At the end, 39 Rxg7+ and 40 Qg8 mate could only be delayed by Black giving up his queen.It was the 37th staging of the British Rapidplay, whose fast time limit of all the moves in 15 minutes for each player, plus a 10 seconds increment per move, makes it possible to hold an entire 11-round tournament in a single weekend

about 10 hours ago
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Kent meningitis outbreak may have peaked as UKHSA reports slowdown in cases

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The Kent meningitis outbreak: what is happening and why?

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Tessa Richards obituary

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George Nicholson obituary

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Father of meningitis victim, 18, tells of family’s ‘immeasurable’ devastation

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Tens of thousands of prisoners in England and Wales at risk of cell fires

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