Far-right radicalization is at a climax

On Friday, a 28-year-old terrorist targeted two mosques in New Zealand and killed 50 innocent people, including children and women.

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Far-right radicalization is at a climax
New Zealand attack is a new low

New Zealand attack is a new low

The killing of 49 Muslims in Christchurch, New Zealand was a terrorist act of critical importance. One of the terrorists, Australian Brenton Tarrant, broadcast the massacre live on social media after posting an 87-page manifesto online.

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Head of Geylani Foundation in Rotterdam urges Dutch government to take immediate action against attacks

Policies of ‘organizing’, ‘controlling’ and ‘modernizing’ Islam stem from the old colonial discourse that promotes the domestication of the ‘good Arab’

The escalating violence in French media continues to worsen every day. I am surprised that my fellow citizens are encouraging a possible civil war in France with calmness and serenity, as if it were a normal scenario we should anticipate in the short or long term.

The so-called 'fight against radicalization' seen in Austria and across Europe in general, only encourages discrimination and alienates Muslims from society through a far more destructive form of radicalism

5 Questions: The French Manifesto against the “New Anti-Semitism”

Why does this manifesto reflect the anti-Muslim rhetoric that prevails in France?

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5 Questions The French Manifesto against the New Anti-Semitism
European law should include Islamophobia Turkish FM

European law should include Islamophobia: Turkish FM

Europe should not wait for Muslims to be burned in gas chambers, Mevlut Cavusoglu says

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Far right discourse about Muslims is normalized in Europe, says Enes Bayrakli

This is the third issue of the annual European Islamophobia Report (EIR) consisting of an overall evaluation of Islamophobia in Europe in the year 2017, as well as 33 country reports which include almost all EU member states and additional countries such as Russia and Norway. This year’s EIR represents the work of 40 prominent scholars and civil society activists from various European countries.

This is the second edition of the annual European Islamophobia Report (EIR) which was presented for the first time in 2015.