Facebook removes posts repeating Boris Johnson’s anti-Muslim comments

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson wrote a column in August 2018 for the Daily Telegraph newspaper in which he said Muslim women in burqas resembled post boxes. (AFP)
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Updated 11 March 2022
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Facebook removes posts repeating Boris Johnson’s anti-Muslim comments

  • The UK prime minister has previously likened Muslim women to post boxes
  • Dummy Facebook account posted same comments and was banned for harassment

LONDON: Controversial comments made in 2018 by UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson were posted by a media watchdog under dummy Facebook accounts and were then removed by the social media platform for hate speech.

Big Brother Watch (BBW) devised the experiment to test Facebook’s content policies — and found that the social media site, owned by tech giant Meta, views words used by Johnson to be “harassment and bullying.”

Johnson wrote a column in August 2018 for the Daily Telegraph newspaper in which he said Muslim women in burqas resembled post boxes.

Repeating those comments, the BBW dummy account posted a picture of Muslim women with the caption: “It is absolutely ridiculous that people should choose to go around looking like letter boxes.” The account was blocked for harassment and bullying.

A remark made by shadow chancellor Angela Rayner in February this year — “Shoot your terrorists and ask questions second” — was also blocked by the platform for breaching its violence and incitement policy.

The UK Conservative Party has often found itself criticized for controversial comments and its attitude towards Muslims. After an independent investigation, Johnson’s comments were found not to have breached the party’s code of conduct.

Johnson has also previously referred to Muslim women as looking like “bank robbers.”

Conservative ministers have been accused of dragging their feet in tackling Islamophobia within the party and wider country. Earlier this year, the senior Conservative politician Nusrat Ghani, who was the UK’s first female Muslim minister, claimed that she had been discriminated against by the party when she was demoted from the position of Under Secretary of State for Transport because her “Muslimness” was “making colleagues uncomfortable.”

In the aftermath of that row, Qari Asim, an imam appointed by the government in 2019 to tackle Islamophobia, said he had received no “meaningful engagement” from ministers “in years.”


Trump administration ends temporary protected status for Yemen

Updated 3 sec ago
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Trump administration ends temporary protected status for Yemen

  • Decision ends humanitarian protections that grant deportation relief and work permits to more ‌than 1,000 Yemeni nationals
US President Donald Trump’s administration has ​ended temporary protected status for Yemen, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said on Friday, the latest move targeting immigrants.
The decision to end humanitarian protections that grant deportation relief and work permits to more ‌than a ‌thousand Yemeni nationals was ​taken ‌after ⁠determining ​that it ⁠was against the US “national interest,” Noem said.
TPS provides relief to people already in the US if their home countries experience a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary ⁠event. The Trump administration has ‌sought to ‌end most enrollment in ​the program, saying ‌it runs counter to US interests.
“After ‌reviewing conditions in the country and consulting with appropriate US government agencies, I determined that Yemen no longer meets ‌the law’s requirements to be designated for Temporary Protected Status,” she ⁠said.
Around ⁠1,380 Yemeni nationals were covered by the temporary protected status as of March 31, 2025, according to the US Citizenship and Immigration Services. The status was last extended in 2024 and was set to expire on March 3 this year.