Hizb-ut-Tahrir hangin' out in London, calling for restoration of Global Caliphate
These guys are still up to no good:
During a lunch break in the sunny courtyard of the palace, people at the conference told of the appeal of the ideology of a caliphate.“If you look at the political structure in the Muslim world, it’s a police state,” said Mohammed Baig, 28, a second-generation British Indian who is an asset manager specializing in corporate governance and has been a Tahrir party member for seven years. “You have the public opinion underground, and then staged public opinion in the media.”
Most people in the Muslim world want Shariah, the code of Islamic law based on the Koran, he said.
“Our feeling is: what gives Western governments the right to impose a set of values on a people who don’t believe in them?” he said, referring to the United States and Britain pushing for democratic values in the Middle East.
Here's most of what you need to know about Hizb-ut-Tahrir in England:











