UK Conservative MP apologizes after uproar over ‘no-go zone’ claims

MP Paul Scully made the claims as the Conservatives were engaged in a fresh row over Islamophobia. (File/Bloomberg)
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Updated 27 February 2024
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UK Conservative MP apologizes after uproar over ‘no-go zone’ claims

  • Paul Scully had said areas of London, Birmingham enforced by Muslims ‘abusing their religion’
  • MP ‘frustrated’ with language he used, says he lost ‘nuance’

LONDON: A Conservative MP in the UK has apologized after claiming that Muslim “no-go” zones exist in major British cities.

Paul Scully, who previously ran to be his party’s candidate for London mayor, made the claims as the Conservatives were engaged in a fresh row over Islamophobia.

In an interview with the BBC, Scully referenced areas of east London and Birmingham as containing “no-go areas” enforced by local Muslims “abusing their religion,” the Daily Telegraph reported on Tuesday.

“If you look at parts of Tower Hamlets, for example, where there are no-go areas, parts of Birmingham Sparkhill, where there are no-go areas, mainly because of doctrine, mainly because of people using, abusing in many ways, their religion to … because it is not the doctrine of Islam, to espouse what some of these people are saying,” he said. “That, I think, is the concern that needs to be addressed.”

Scully was responding to the recent sacking of MP Lee Anderson, who had claimed that Islamists had “got control” of London Mayor Sadiq Khan.

In a subsequent interview for BBC Radio London interview on Tuesday, Scully said he “put his hands up” for using language he “regrets.”

He added that he was “frustrated” with the language he had used in the initial interview, and that he had lost “nuance.”

Scully said: “What I was trying to say, I thought I was being specific about but clearly not, is the fact that a lot of the conversation, and the vacuum that’s allowed to then be filled by populists, is when prejudice builds up because of perception.

“There are areas of this country where there are tiny, tiny groups of people that cause people to feel uncomfortable in particular areas.

“That might be a white gang, that might be a black gang, a Muslim gang, whatever, and that then tends to write off whole communities for some people.”

Scully’s initial claims on “no-go zones” were condemned by Labour and Conservative figures representing the areas he referenced.

Andy Street, the Conservative mayor of the West Midlands, said “those in Westminster” should “stop the nonsense slurs.”

He added: “The idea that Birmingham has a ‘no-go’ zone is news to me, and I suspect the good people of Sparkhill.”

Labour’ Jess Phillips said: “As one of the MPs for Sparkhill, I am expecting an apology for this utter drivel. My kids hang out in Sparkhill day and night, never had a moment’s worry.

“I go there weekly and live literally a five-minute walk from there and used to live there myself.”

Scully also claimed that the Conservative Party did not have a problem with Islamophobia.


Pope Leo warns of ‘new arms race’ as US-Russia treaty to expire

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Pope Leo warns of ‘new arms race’ as US-Russia treaty to expire

  • New START, the last nuclear treaty between Washington and Moscow, is due to expire on Thursday
  • The treaty was signed in 2010 by then-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his US counterpart Barack Obama
VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo XIV warned Wednesday of the risk of “a new arms race” as the last US-Russia nuclear treaty is set to expire.
New START, the last nuclear treaty between Washington and Moscow after decades of agreements dating to the Cold War, is due to expire on Thursday, and with it restrictions on the two top nuclear powers.
“I urge you not to abandon this instrument without seeking to ensure that it is followed up in a concrete and effective manner,” the American pope said at his weekly general audience.
“The current situation requires us to do everything possible to avert a new arms race, which further threatens peace between nations,” he said.
Leo, the Catholic Church’s first American pontiff, said it was “more urgent than ever to replace the logic of fear and mistrust with a shared ethic capable of guiding choices toward the common good.”
The Kremlin has offered a one-year extension of the treaty, but while US President Donald Trump said in September that an extension of the New START “sounds like a good idea,” little has changed since then.
The treaty, which included a monitoring mechanism, was signed in 2010 by then-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his US counterpart Barack Obama.
But Russia suspended monitoring inspections during the Covid-19 pandemic and talks on extending the agreement have broken down in recent years due to tensions over the Ukraine war.
Moscow had also accused Washington of impeding monitoring missions on US soil.
In 2023, Russia froze its participation in New START, but it has continued to voluntarily adhere to the limits set in the treaty.
Moscow has last year tested its latest nuclear weapon carriers without atomic warheads, and Trump said he was moving two nuclear submarines closer to Russia.