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DUKAS_101737192_EYE
Food banks are no solution to poverty. Charitable food aid is a sticking plaster on a gaping wound of systemic inequality in the UK and US, say signatories including Prof Olivier de Schutter, a former UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
LIVERPOOL, 08 March 2019 - Worshippers at Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Centre who donated groceries to a local food bank linked to football supporters' group Fans Supporting Foodbanks. Liverpool FC players Sadio Mane? and Mohamed Salah regularly attend the mosque and supporters Ian Byrne ( Liverpool), Dave Kelly ( Everton) and John Ratomski ( West Ham ) contacted the Imam, Shafiq Ur Rehman, after Salah was the target of racist abuse while playing at West Ham's ground earlier this season.
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DUKAS_101737203_EYE
Food banks are no solution to poverty. Charitable food aid is a sticking plaster on a gaping wound of systemic inequality in the UK and US, say signatories including Prof Olivier de Schutter, a former UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
LIVERPOOL, 08 March 2019 - Imam Shift Ur Rehman wearing his new West Ham scarf gift as he addresses worshippers at Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Centre who donated groceries to a local food bank linked to football supporters' group Fans Supporting Foodbanks. Liverpool FC players Sadio Mane? and Mohamed Salah regularly attend the mosque and supporters Ian Byrne ( Liverpool), Dave Kelly ( Everton) and John Ratomski ( West Ham ) contacted the Imam, Shafiq Ur Rehman, after Salah was the target of racist abuse while playing at West Ham's ground earlier this season.
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DUKAS_101737196_EYE
Food banks are no solution to poverty. Charitable food aid is a sticking plaster on a gaping wound of systemic inequality in the UK and US, say signatories including Prof Olivier de Schutter, a former UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
LIVERPOOL, 08 March 2019 - Worshippers at Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Centre who donated groceries to a local food bank linked to football supporters' group Fans Supporting Foodbanks. Liverpool FC players Sadio Mane? and Mohamed Salah regularly attend the mosque and supporters Ian Byrne ( Liverpool), Dave Kelly ( Everton) and John Ratomski ( West Ham ) contacted the Imam, Shafiq Ur Rehman, after Salah was the target of racist abuse while playing at West Ham's ground earlier this season.
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101737195_EYE
Food banks are no solution to poverty. Charitable food aid is a sticking plaster on a gaping wound of systemic inequality in the UK and US, say signatories including Prof Olivier de Schutter, a former UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
LIVERPOOL, 08 March 2019 - Worshippers at Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Centre who donated groceries to a local food bank linked to football supporters' group Fans Supporting Foodbanks. Liverpool FC players Sadio Mane? and Mohamed Salah regularly attend the mosque and supporters Ian Byrne ( Liverpool), Dave Kelly ( Everton) and John Ratomski ( West Ham ) contacted the Imam, Shafiq Ur Rehman, after Salah was the target of racist abuse while playing at West Ham's ground earlier this season.
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DUKAS_101737197_EYE
Food banks are no solution to poverty. Charitable food aid is a sticking plaster on a gaping wound of systemic inequality in the UK and US, say signatories including Prof Olivier de Schutter, a former UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
LIVERPOOL, 08 March 2019 - Worshippers at Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Centre who donated groceries to a local food bank linked to football supporters' group Fans Supporting Foodbanks. Liverpool FC players Sadio Mane? and Mohamed Salah regularly attend the mosque and supporters Ian Byrne ( Liverpool), Dave Kelly ( Everton) and John Ratomski ( West Ham ) contacted the Imam, Shafiq Ur Rehman, after Salah was the target of racist abuse while playing at West Ham's ground earlier this season.
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DUKAS_101206211_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
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DUKAS_101206212_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101206208_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101206209_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101206207_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101206206_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101205935_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101205936_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101205934_EYE
Tories are prejudiced against Islam, says council candidate. Amir Sadjady told to ‘suck it up’ and stop complaining after alleging discrimination.
Amir Sadjady, photographed at home in west London. He is a Muslim Conservative who was told to stop complaining that he had been discriminated against after he failed to become a councillor says his experiences led him to conclude the party was “prejudiced against Islam”. Sadjady, a small business owner, said he was the victim of “passive aggressive discrimination” when he was not selected last year for a winnable seat in two west London boroughs, and wanted to speak out in the hope the party would reform. Sadjady, 41, said he was repeatedly told to keep quiet about his concerns and that at one point Shaun Bailey, the Conservative party’s London mayoral candidate, told him to “suck it up” so that he would have a chance of getting on in the party. Bailey denies using the phrase “suck it up”.
“There is a prejudice against Islam in the Conservatives, 100%, that’s partly driven by the rightwing media,” Sadjady said. “They either ignore you, or don’t select you, or they bully you out. There is definitely Islamophobia there.”
© Alicia Canter / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101736199_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
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DUKAS_101736112_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101736194_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101736203_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101736196_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101736201_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101736204_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_101736202_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101736200_EYE
‘The Tories are institutionally Islamophobic’: Miqdaad Versi takes on MPs and the media.
Miqdaad Versi is assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain. Versi monitors Islamophobia in the British media. He talks about the coverage of the Christchurch massacre, anti-Muslim prejudice – and why he is an optimist. Versi is the Oxford-educated assistant secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, a democratic Muslim umbrella body in Britain with over 500 affiliates, representing national, regional and local organisations, mosques, charities and schools.
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DUK10092851_030
FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Die Bilder des Tages
(180611) -- CAIRO, June 11, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Muslims attend a night prayer during Laylat Al-Qadr at a mosque in Cairo, Egypt, on June 11, 2018. (Xinhua/Ahmed Gomaa)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02150404
(c) Dukas -
DUK10092611_065
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- BAGHDAD, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Iraqis shop on the first day of Ramadan at a market in Baghdad, Iraq, on May 17, 2018. Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, in which they abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset. (Xinhua/Khalil Dawood)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02130242
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DUK10092611_059
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- CAIRO, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- A worker cleans the yard of the Al-Azhar Mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Cairo, Egypt, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Meng Tao)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02130248
(c) Dukas -
DUK10092611_062
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- CAIRO, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Muslims pray at the Al-Azhar Mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Cairo, Egypt, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Meng Tao)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02130245
(c) Dukas -
DUK10092611_064
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- CAIRO, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- A Muslim reads the Koran at the Al-Azhar Mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Cairo, Egypt, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Meng Tao)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02130249
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DUK10092611_060
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- CAIRO, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- People walk at the Al-Azhar Mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Cairo, Egypt, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Wu Huiwo)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02130252
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DUK10092611_061
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- BAGHDAD, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Iraqis shop on the first day of Ramadan at a market in Baghdad, Iraq, on May 17, 2018. Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, in which they abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset. (Xinhua/Khalil Dawood)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02130241
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DUK10092611_066
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- BEIRUT, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Ramadan's decorations are seen on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in a street in Beirut, Lebanon, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Bilal Jawich)
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NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- BETHLEHEM, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Traditional sweets are seen inside a market on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan, in the West Bank City of Bethlehem, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Luay Sababa) (wtc)
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NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- GAZA, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- A Palestinian vendor sells food in his shop in a market on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Gaza City, on May 17, 2018. Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, in which they abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset. (Xinhua/Wissam Nassar)
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DUK10092611_056
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- GAZA, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- A Palestinian vendor sells Ramadan lanterns in his shop in a market on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Gaza City, on May 17, 2018. Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, in which they abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset. (Xinhua/Wissam Nassar)
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DUK10092611_063
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- CAIRO, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- A Muslim reads the Koran at the Al-Azhar Mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Cairo, Egypt, on May 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Wu Huiwo)
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DUK10092611_068
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- PESHAWAR (PAKISTAN), May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Pakistani Muslims pray before breaking their fast at a mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan in Pakistan's Peshawar on May 17, 2018. Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, in which they abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset. (Xinhua/Umar Qayyum)
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DUK10092611_067
NEWS - Ramadan: Beginn des Fastenmonats
(180517) -- GAZA, May 17, 2018 (Xinhua) -- Palestinian men read Quran inside a mosque on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan, in Gaza City, on May 17, 2018. Muslims around the world celebrate Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar, in which they abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset. (Xinhua)
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STUDIO - Shaykh Dr. Muhammad Umar Al-Qadri
Shaykh Dr. Muhammad Umar Al-Qadri, CEO of Irish Muslim Peace and Integration Council pictured in the Al-Mustafa Islamic Centre in Coolmine, Dublin.
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STUDIO - Kamila Shamsie
Kamila Naheed Shamsie is a Pakistani novelist who writes in the English language. Her burningly topical new novel, Home Fire, about citizenship and radicalisation explores what it is to be a Muslim in London today. Pictured wearing : Acne Studios dress, £550, at matchesfashion.com.
© Sophia Spring / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUK10072996_003
STUDIO - Kamila Shamsie
Kamila Naheed Shamsie is a Pakistani novelist who writes in the English language. Her burningly topical new novel, Home Fire, about citizenship and radicalisation explores what it is to be a Muslim in London today. Pictured wearing : Acne Studios dress, £550, at matchesfashion.com.
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DUK10072996_002
STUDIO - Kamila Shamsie
Kamila Naheed Shamsie is a Pakistani novelist who writes in the English language. Her burningly topical new novel, Home Fire, about citizenship and radicalisation explores what it is to be a Muslim in London today.
© Sophia Spring / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUK10072996_001
STUDIO - Kamila Shamsie
Kamila Naheed Shamsie is a Pakistani novelist who writes in the English language. Her burningly topical new novel, Home Fire, about citizenship and radicalisation explores what it is to be a Muslim in London today. Pictured wearing : Erdem dress, £1,945, at matchesfashion.com.
© Sophia Spring / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUK10074643_003
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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DUK10074643_001
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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DUK10074643_002
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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DUK10074643_007
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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DUK10074643_004
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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DUK10074643_009
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
© Daniel Ha,bury / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUK10074643_005
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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DUK10074643_008
STUDIO - Zeena Qureshi
Zeena Qureshi, CEO and Co-Founder of Ananas Foundation. Qureshi's dream is to ensure that extremists “have no place to hide”. The 26-year-old is the chief executive of Ananas, a new platform that is fighting radicalisation by "mapping ideologies", providing a compass to navigate belief systems and using cryptocurrency to reward contributors. Ananas, which is also a charitable foundation, uses a similar approach to Google and Facebook in terms of mapping how people think, except rather than using that to push ads, the idea is to help people to understand each other better. Its first mission is to create a "living Koran", to combat both jihadist terrorism and Islamophobia.
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