Ikke helt korrekt, - C4 lavede tidligere på året et program med optagelser 
fra moskeer i England, flest med skjult kamera. Det var grove sager der blev 
prædiket:
Among the things said by the preachers and publicized were that girls of ten
should be hit to force them to wear hijab; women are inferior to men and
their testimony is worth half that of men; men are in charge of women and
should not be allowed to leave the house without permission; Muslims should
live in the UK as  a state within a state; secular law should be done away
with; Muslims will become dominant in the UK; and this political dominance
is decreed by Allah; Muslims have a duty to destroy the British political
system; those responsible for killing British soldiers in Afghanistan are
heroes: "The hero of Islam is the one who separated his head from his
shoulders." It is difficult to see how the offensiveness of all this can be
neutralized by contextualization
Og der var mange flere, fx om jøder der alle skulle dræbes og så en 
gryntelyd fra imamen,  - se længere uddrag fra The Telegraph. - og find evt. 
hele TV-udsendelsen på Nettet.
Channel 4 havde givet alle imamer ret til at komme med kommentarer, men 
ingen meldte sig, og de har nu sendt politiet 56 timers råbånd, og vil gerne 
høre i hvilken kontekst, de rablende udtalelser havde været i orden - intet 
svar.
Politiet og rigsadvokaten har derimod meldt C4 til pressenævnet, men siger 
de ikke vil forsøge at få en straffedom over C4. Altså moskeernes 
prædikanter blev meldt til politiet, og politiet reagerer ved at beskylde 
kanal 4 for udbredelse af "racehad" ved at vise hvad der bliver sagt.
Naturligvis *kunne* der have været tale om en forvrænget historie, men denne 
er folk enige om simpelthen taler for sig selv, intet kan bortforklare hvad 
der bliver prædiket til de mange tuside tilhørere.
By Charles Moore
Last Updated: 12:01am BST 11/08/2007
      There are lots of stories running at the moment about how television 
makes things up to suit its purposes. It was into this pattern that 
prominent press reports on Thursday appeared to fit. The reports said that 
the Crown Prosecution Service and the West Midlands police had decided that 
a programme called Undercover Mosque, made for Dispatches on Channel 4, had 
"completely distorted" the remarks of Muslim preachers featured in the 
programme. The CPS and the police announced that they were making a 
complaint about the programme to the television regulator, Ofcom.
      Few seemed to notice what a strange story this was. Why is it the 
business of the CPS or the police to make complaints, which are nothing to 
do with the law, about what appears on television? Aren't they supposed to 
be fighting crime, not acting as television critics?
      When you poke around a bit, the story becomes a little clearer, but no 
less strange.
      After the programme appeared earlier this year, many people who 
watched it were horrified by the extremism it depicted. It was, indeed, 
horrifying. The programme, all of whose material was collected, sometimes 
covertly, from British mosques, mainly in Birmingham, showed film, DVDs and 
internet messages from Islamist sermons and speeches. One preacher speaks of 
a British Muslim soldier killed by the Taliban in Afghanistan and says: "The 
hero is the one who separated his head from his shoulders." Another says 
that all Jews will be killed at the end of time, and makes a snorting noise 
as if imitating a pig.
      One pronounces that woman is "deficient" and that homosexual men 
should be "thrown off the mountain", another that children should offer 
themselves for Islamic martyrdom, a third that Aids was deliberately spread 
in Africa by Christian missionaries who slipped it into inoculations.
      As a result of all this, people, including, I believe, local MPs, 
asked the police to investigate the preachers to see if prosecutions for 
crimes of racial hatred could be brought against them. C4 itself did not ask 
for these investigations, but co-operated with police inquiries.
      But then, on Wednesday, without any warning to Channel 4, the CPS and 
the West Midlands police issued their fatwa. Not only had they investigated, 
and decided, as they were entitled to do, that there were no charges to 
bring against people featured in the programme: they also announced that 
they had investigated the programme itself for stirring up racial hatred.
      Again, they had decided not to press charges. But, said West Midlands 
police smugly, they had pursued the making of the programme "with as much 
rigour as the extremism portrayed within the documentary itself". They had 
concluded that comments had been "broadcast out of context" and so they and 
the CPS had complained to Ofcom.
"Hurra, vi kapitulerer" som en tysk bog hedder.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2007/08/11/do1101.xml