UK: Muslim ‘expert’ on Islamist radicalisation says stabbed Ahmadi shopkeeper was ‘not a real Muslim’
Top expert on Islamist radicalisation is investigated by university for saying slain Muslim shopkeeper was ‘not a real Muslim’
- Researcher Shiraz Maher wrote he does not ‘regard Ahmadis as Muslims’
- Came days after man admitted killing Asad Shah for ‘disrespecting’ Islam
- Glasgow shopkeeper Mr Shah was part of the the Ahmadiyya community
- Maher has apologised for remarks which are being investigated by King’s College London
A top expert on Islamist radicalisation is being investigated for saying that a slain Muslim shopkeeper was ‘not a real Muslim’, it has been reported.
Shiraz Maher, a researcher at King’s College London, wrote on Facebook that he does not ‘regard Ahmadis as Muslims’ – days after a taxi driver admitted killing Asad Shah because he ‘disrespected’ Islam’.
Mr Shah, part of the Ahmadiyya community, was knifed to death in his shop in what was feared at the time to have been a sectarian attack against the peace-loving branch of Islam he followed.
Earlier this month, taxi driver Tanveer Ahmed, accused of his murder, said through his lawyer that he killed the much-loved family man because he had claimed to be ‘a prophet’.
Days later Mr Maher, a senior research fellow at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation, reportedly wrote on Facebook: ‘I really wonder if I’m missing something here but I don’t regard Ahmadis as Muslim.’
According to Richard Kerbaj of the Sunday Times, the Sunni Muslim added: ‘Obviously this does not mean I think they should be persecuted or suffer for their beliefs … yes, condemn the murder and, more long term, suck up the heat out of Muslim hostilities directed towards them but that still doesn’t mean that they should then be accepted as Muslim.’
The newspaper reports that he has since apologised for his ‘ill-advised and misjudged’ comments ‘given the circumstances of Asad Shah’s murder and the political context thereafter’.
He told the Sunday Times that he had often said Ahmadis should not be targeted for their beliefs.
A representative from the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community UK told the Sunday Times that his earlier remarks risked ‘creating division’.
King’s told MailOnline this morning that it is investigating and insisted the comments were his own opinions.
Mr Shah, 40, was killed at his Glasgow shop on March 24 – the day before Good Friday.
Hours before his murder, he had written on Facebook: ‘Good Friday and very Happy Easter, especially to my beloved Christian nation.’
Mr Shah belonged to the Ahmadiyya community, which promotes peace and tolerance but has been persecuted by members of orthodox Islamic sects in Pakistan.
Tanveer Ahmed, 32, remains in custody charged with murder.
MailOnline has made attempts to reach Mr Maher for further comment this morning.
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