The Birmingham policing scandal has crossed a line. What began as cowardice has curdled into something far worse.
It has now emerged that a Birmingham mosque was involved in interviewing and appointing the police chief whose force later excluded Jewish football supporters from public life. This is not a minor procedural curiosity. It goes to the heart of why the truth was bent, why the threat was inverted, and why the victims were removed instead of protected.
Craig Guildford, the head of West Midlands Police, was appointed after a process that included Kamran Hussain, then chief executive of Green Lane mosque, sitting on an interview panel. That same mosque was later consulted by the force ahead of the decision to exclude Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from Villa Park. The same force then claimed, falsely, that the threat came from Jewish fans rather than from local extremists preparing violence.
Individually, each of these facts can be brushed aside. Together, they form a pattern that can no longer be ignored.
Green Lane mosque is not an abstract "community partner". It has hosted preachers who promoted antisemitic conspiracy theories and sectarian intolerance. Government funding was suspended after videos surfaced of sermons excusing discrimination and endorsing physical "discipline" of wives. These are not marginal details. They are the backdrop.
And yet this institution was treated as a stakeholder in policing decisions affecting Jews. Its former chief executive helped vet the man now presiding over a force accused of lying to Parliament, concealing intelligence, and rewriting events to protect its reputation.
This is not an accusation of crude conspiracy. It is something more corrosive. It is the exposure of a system in which authority is shaped by appeasement networks. Where those most capable of causing unrest are granted influence. Where enforcement becomes negotiable and truth becomes inconvenient.
That is how we arrived at a position where police logs recorded masked groups gathering, youths "looking to fight", and intelligence that the Israeli team was being tracked online. And yet the public was told the day was "largely peaceful" to avoid "over-dramatisation". This was not reassurance. It was deception.
When Keir Starmer called the ban wrong, he was right. When Kemi Badenoch demanded Guildford's dismissal, she was right. When critics said this reeked of political pressure rather than policing necessity, they were right again.
The most revealing detail is not who sat on which panel. It is what followed. A police force that consults mosques hosting extremist rhetoric. A leadership culture shaped by "community engagement" where the loudest voices are treated as veto-holders. A decision to exclude Jews "for their own safety". And then a cover-up to make it all look routine.
This is how equal policing is dismantled. Not through open prejudice, but through institutional fear. Not because officers hate Jews, but because the system rewards accommodation and punishes enforcement. Because it is easier to manage the victims than confront the threat.
The defenders of this arrangement will say there is nothing sinister here. That processes were followed. That panels were broad. That no single individual decided anything. That is precisely the problem. When responsibility is so diffused that no one is accountable, injustice becomes frictionless.
A country that allows sectarian pressure to shape police leadership and operational decisions is no longer policing by consent. It is policing by concession.
Birmingham did not stumble into this outcome. It arrived there by design. And until that design is dismantled, this will not be the last time a minority is told to stay away quietly so others do not have to behave. That is not the rule of law. It is governance by fear.
"Craig Guildford was appointed after a process that included Kamran Hussain, then chief executive of Green Lane mosque, sitting on an interview panel."
@babybeginner The guy on the right is pretending to be a woman??? 😳 If you closed your eyes, muffled your ears and tied your hands your senses would still tell you he’s a man!
@darrengrimes Are you sure they’re actual police officers?? From the clips I’ve seen they look nothing like police officers whatsoever… they look like overweight extras from a dodgy film! 😳 😂
Professionalism seemed to evaporate several years ago.
@jamsyjam1989@CaptKennie@dave24144975 A baby lying across seats whether asleep or not, is not safe. The child should be on its parents lap, if the trains brakes suddenly the baby will fall off the seats. Irresponsible parenting and socially ignorant all at once.
@greh65@pretty_blueyes@daveatherton You do realise that not all women voted Labour and certainly not for increased and or unvetted immigration…?
Please don’t tar and feather us all with your assumptions.
@LTB0022@benonwine You’ve met ‘most people’ then? Gosh you’ve been busy!
You must be overloaded by now, maybe that’s why you’re viewing people in such a negative light?
@Katzenkiesel@benonwine Even if the poor man was already dead, someone standing by him would have seemed more dignified and caring.
Given the amount of people milling around it doesn’t seem as though their own safety was a priority.
There are sadly more confirmed fatalities, prayers for them all.
Charlie Kirk reminded us that a life of courage and virtue isn’t easy—but it’s worth living. His example should inspire us all to stand boldly for what’s right.
@officialsammyuk@LauraJ4SWEast@reformparty_uk Her outfit is totally inappropriate. Anyone saying on here that she has breasts, yes we’re very well aware of them but she didn’t need to make sure they were the only thing that was noticeable!
@_EnglishLion_@TheGriftReport To be so gobby, loud and totally ignorant should just be embarrassing but it’s terrifying that there’s plenty more like her…