Tajamal Amar fled to the UK in 2007 after being the victim of drive-by shootings (Picture: NTI)

A Christian who fled Pakistan to escape violence 10 years ago says he believes he was beaten up because he had poppies on his car.

Tajamal Amar, 46, suffered a broken nose and several lacerations to the head and body after being attacked outside the Red Chilli takeaway in Littleover, Derby, on October 20.

He was taken to hospital where he woke up five hours later after apparently being hit on the head with a knuckleduster then kicked while he was on the floor.

Tajamal, of Derby, said: ‘Several times, local Pakistani people in Derby have taken offence from the fact that I am Christian.




‘When they first find out, many stop talking to me. My wife and I have often been shunned.

‘On the day of my attack the visible display of a cross in my car and two poppies just below the front bonnet, triggered the violence against me.

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‘I know this, because for a few days before the attack the same men, glared at me after they noticed my Christian paraphernalia.

‘I fled from Pakistan to escape violence such as this, but more and more the same violence is coming into Britain.

‘Freedom of religion should be the right of any British citizen but today I feel unsafe, even then nothing will stop me going to church.

‘I will pray for my attackers and hope they will change their hard-line approach to faith which is very dangerous for our society.’

Derbyshire Police confirmed that they are investigating the incident.

Mr Amar moved to the UK in 2007 after being targeted in drive-by shootings by people wanting to convert him to Islam.

He was attacked outside a takeaway – he believes it was because he has poppies on his car (Picture: NTI)

Since moving to England he has displayed poppies, donating to the Poppy Appeal and Help For Heroes.

He said: ‘What you have to remember about this attack is that it has happened in Great Britain. It was not Pakistan or a predominantly Muslim country, it was in Great Britain.

‘These people are doing this openly, without any shame or any fear of the law.They are doing it because no one is catching them or stopping them.

‘I don’t know when they are going to kill someone in the streets. They are uncontrollable, these people. They are trying to force Islam into this country. They are trying to put their flag on to this country.

‘Because I am a kaffir (infidel), in their eyes, they have chosen me to attack. If I did something like this in Pakistan – trying to enforce Christianity through force – then me and my whole family would be in the police station being punished.

He said that he has been targeted by people who take offence to his Christian beliefs (Picture: NTI)

‘But these people have not been caught. They had seen me earlier in the evening, when I went to work in the takeaway at 5pm.

‘They were staring at me and looking at the poppies and the cross in my car..



‘I do not know their mentality or what they were thinking. They are like hunters. They attacked me without any argument or words between us.

‘It was the first time we directly crossed paths. It was unexpected. They attacked me so severely, and basically left me for dead.

‘It was about to six to eight hours before I woke up. Apparently my sister was on the phone to me at the time, but I couldn’t remember that until she mentioned it.

‘Apparently she heard screaming and swearing and the sound of an attack happening – punches and kicks.

‘It happened in a dark passage leading up to the car park, they must have waited there for me to come across or something like that.

‘I saw two people, but I think there were more. One of them had glasses on and a grey beard, and the other was shorter and had a dark complexion and dark hair.

‘The taller man put his hands behind my back, and the other one hit me with the iron fist on his hand.

‘I was not discharged from the hospital for two days, and it was sometime between 2am and 3am on Saturday that I even woke up.’

Speaking about his faith, he said: ‘I have always been a Christian, my father was a Christian, my grandfather was a Christian and my mother was too.

‘It’s a part of who I am, it’s something that has always been there. I am proud of my heritage.


‘In Pakistan, I went to a very good missionary school, so I was well educated in the ways of the Bible and Christian literature.

‘Myself and my family, we ran a clothes business for years. It was passed down through the family.

‘But people did not like that we were openly Christian, and they tried to talk us round to the ways of Islam.

‘These preachers would come to our business every day and try to talk us about becoming a Muslim. But, like I say, we are all well-educated and we know the ways of Christianity.

‘When they saw that we were not going to be talked round, they used force against us. One day, in 2007, people came and shot bullets through the glass of the office.

‘They tried to murder us, basically.

‘Thankfully we all survived, but my wife and I moved to England afterwards, because it was too dangerous to stay.

‘We wanted to be somewhere where we could show our faith openly.

‘I have had that car for four years, and I have always had the poppies on the front of it and the cross.

‘I never take them off. Sometimes, if someone comes round and steals the poppies, then I have to put new ones in.

‘But I will never drive around without the poppies.

‘I am a huge supporter of the British Armed Forces and the work that they do around the world to stop the bad people and to make us safe.

‘For a long time I have given money to charities like Help for Heroes and the Poppy Appeal, because I respect what they are doing in protecting us.


‘I want to salute their good work, and the poppies show that.

‘These persecutors cannot stop me from showing my support, and I want to put more poppies on my car.

‘I am going to put on as many as I can – maybe two more or four more – becauseI am not scared of anything or anyone.

‘I am scared for my wife and for my daughter, of course, but I am not scared for myself. Only for them.’