Islamophobic crime in London 'up by 70%' By Zack Adesina and Oana Marocico

BBC Inside Out, London Published duration 7 September 2015

image copyright Getty Images image caption An organisation which monitors Islamophobic attacks claimed women are the primary targets

Hate crimes against Muslims in London have risen by 70% in the past year, according to Met Police statistics.

Tell MAMA, an organisation that monitors Islamophobic attacks, claimed women were the primary targets.

The group told Inside Out London women wearing a face veil were victims of more "aggressive incidents".

The Met define Islamophobic crime as any offence intended to affect those known or perceived to be Muslim. Reported incidents ranged from cyber-bullying and assaults to extreme violence.

One of the highest increases was in Merton, south west London, which saw a rise from eight incidents in the year to July 2014 up to 29 in the subsequent 12-month period - an increase of 263%.

The borough with the highest number of incidents in the year 2014-15 was Westminster, which had 54 Islamophobic crimes, according to Scotland Yard's figures.

'Targeted abuse'

Tell MAMA said about 60% of Islamophobia victims were women.

Fiyaz Mughal, director of the organisation, said: "We realised that at a street level Muslim women who were visible, and wore the Hijab or the headscarf, were suffering more targeted abuse.

"We also realised quite early on that women who wear Niqab, the face veil, suffered more aggressive incidents - there was something about the face veil that in a way brought out the worst in the perpetrator."

media caption With fears growing that Islamophobic hate crimes are on the rise, the BBC's religious affairs correspondent Caroline Wyatt exposes the reality of daily life for some women living behind the veil

The charity said female victims often avoided contacting the police because they feared it could make matters worse.

The Met does not have a breakdown of the gender of victims of Islamophobic crime but said they believed the overall increase in attacks were due to "improved methods of recording crime".

Cdr Mak Chishty, the force's lead for hate crime, said: "There are a number of reasons why Muslim women are targeted more than men.

'No choice'

"Their physical attire obviously says they are Muslim, they are normally by themselves and with children and the cowardice shown by perpetrators is that it is easier to attack a women with children than it is a man."

Muslim convert and mother-of-two Joni Clark moved her family from Penge in south east London, to Whitechapel in east London, after suffering several Islamophobic incidents.

"I receive abuse every single day," she said.

"The attacks affect my children deeply and I fear for their safety so I feel I have no choice but to move."

BBC Inside Out London is on BBC One in the London region on Monday 7 September at 19:30 BST, nationwide on the BBC News Channel at 20:30 and on the BBC iPlayer for 28 days thereafter.