British newspaper tries to bury apology for Islamophobia at 2am, internet makes sure it gets heard

Published December 20th, 2016 - 11:29 GMT
Islamophobia in the UK rose 326 percent in 2015
Islamophobia in the UK rose 326 percent in 2015

Controversial British newspaper columnist Katie Hopkins has issued an apology for falsely accusing a Muslim family of being extremists.

Hopkins had written in the Daily Mail last year that the US authorities were right to stop the Mahmood family from entering America. She suggested the two brothers, who were travelling to Disneyland with their children, were radicals with connections to Al-Qaeda. Hopkins later incorrectly suggested one of their sons ran an extremist Facebook page.

In the apology, tweeted by the controversial writer in the middle of the night, the Mail said “ We and Katie Hopkins apologise to the Mahmood family for the distress and embarrassment caused and have agreed to pay them substantial damages and their legal costs.”

However, loath to let Hopkins’ heartfelt expression of regret go unseen, Twitter users - including some public figures - shared the apology thousands of times:

Social commentator, Owen Jones

Journalist, Siraj Datoo

Comedian, Jennifer Saunders

Others took the opportunity to make clear that the Islamophobia spread by figures like Hopkins has no place in Britain:

This cartoon references a previous incident in which Hopkins, then writing for the Sun newspaper, referred to immigrants as “cockroaches.”

Islamophobia is an increasing problem in the UK, with the anti-Muslim hate monitoring group Tell MAMA reporting a 326 percent increase in incidents in 2015. The problem is perpetuated by scaremongering and inaccurate reporting from certain elements of the press.

RA

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