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Has Political Islam Failed

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    Transcript: Tariq Ramadan

    The full text of our debate about Islamism and the rise and fall of the Muslim

    Brotherhood.

    Read the full transcript of Head to Head -Has polit ic al Islam failed?below:

    Part one

    Mehdi Hasan (VO):The Arab Spring shook the foundation of the Middle East. Across

    the region millions went on to elect not secular but Islamic leaders. In Egypt, however,

    the Muslim Brotherhood were confronted by mass protests and ousted by the army. So

    can political Islam or Islamism work in a democracy?

    I'm Mehdi Hasan and I've come here to the Oxford Union to go Head to Head with

    Professor Tariq Ramadan, whose grandfather founded the Muslim Brotherhood. Ranked

    by Timemagazine as one of the 100 most influential people on earth, his call for reform

    in the Islamic world has triggered both widespread support and outrage from both

    Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

    To debate these issues I will also be joined by Anas Altikriti, a political activist and

    supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood; journalist Yasmin Libiab-Brown, founder of British

    Muslims for Secular democracy; and professor Alan Johnson, from the Pro-Israeli lobby

    group BICOM.

    Mehdi Hasan:Ladies and gentlemen, put your hands together for Professor Tariq

    Ramadan.

    Muslim by religion, European by culture, he says he wants to bridge the gap between

    East and West. Tariq, how political is the religion of Islam in your view? Is it possible to

    take politics out of Islam?

    Tariq Ramadan:I would say we should never ever distinguish or separate, or divorce,

    politics from ethics. And ethics has to do with religion. The point for me is never to come

    with religion as a dogmatic understanding, a dogmatic system, and imposing onto

    politics religion.

    Mehdi Hasan: How do you define the word Islamism? And how do you distinguish it

    from the religion of Islam?

    http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/headtohead/2014/03/political-islam-failed-20143814278619177.htmlhttp://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/headtohead/2014/03/political-islam-failed-20143814278619177.htmlhttp://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/headtohead/2014/03/political-islam-failed-20143814278619177.htmlhttp://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/headtohead/2014/03/political-islam-failed-20143814278619177.html
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    Tariq Ramadan: This was in fact a concept that came from within the Muslim

    Brotherhood in the '50s in jail, where a group of people were, was saying, the only true

    Muslims are us, and Nasser is no longer a Muslim.

    The mainstream Muslim Brotherhood movements said no, we are "Islamiyun", and we

    are all Muslims. "Muslimun". Meaning that the Islamists have a social project, a political

    project as different from Muslims who are practicing Muslims and believers. So there is

    something here which has to do a political vision about the state, but also a vision about

    the society.

    Mehdi Hasan:But given it's a word that's applied to the Turkish government, and to the

    Taliban, to the Tunisian government and to al-Qaeda, is it a useful term?

    Tariq Ramadan:That, that's the very good point. I think that we need a qualification,

    today, when we speak about Islamist, we don't know what we are talking about because

    this is what is coming sometimes from the West, and sometimes from secularists in

    Muslim-majority countries saying you know what at the end they are all the same. They

    all want what Bin Laden wanted.

    Mehdi Hasan:So when people in the West, in particular, but not just in the West, in the

    Muslim majority countries as well, talk about the threat of Islamism to democracy, to

    human rights, is that something that you disagree with? Do you think that's excessivecriticism, and unfair criticism?

    Tariq Ramadan:That, that's based on nothing but projection and, and nonsense. They

    have a selective approach towards democracy. If it suits them, that's fine. So the point

    for me is to put all the Islamists who are saying that they are against democracy, it's

    completely wrong. In fact, if you look at what is happening in Turkey, 10 years ago,

    when people were talking about Erdogan, they were saying, he's going to apply Sharia

    implement Sharia and there will be no democracy. At the end, he's much more

    democratic and he's much more a democrat than the military, and even some secularist

    who are ready to use the army against the democratic process.

    Mehdi Hasan:If you look at what's going on in Turkey at the moment, which is

    embroiled in, has been embroiled in, violent protests, accusations of corruption, in-

    fighting. You look at Hamas in Gaza, There are some who would say that Islamist

    groups are very good at being an opposition, not so good at governing, not so good at

    taking charge. Wherever they come to power, there seems to be problems, chaos,

    human rights violations.

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    Tariq Ramadan:There are lots of things to do still in Turkey to get a free society,

    respecting minorities, that's for sure. But if you look at all the other countries, Turkey is

    much better than many.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay, just on the Arab Spring more generally, am I right in saying that

    you have refused to call it a Spring, or even a revolution? And if so, what would you call

    it? What we see in the Arab world?

    Tariq Ramadan:I think that from the very beginning I never bought the idea that these

    were revolutions. if you try to tell me that all what happened on the ground was not

    known by the West, I don't buyhis. This is nonsense. And I said from the very beginning,

    we are too much focusing on the political equation of what is happening, while the big

    big question is the economic side of the equation. This has to do with economy and newactors in the region.

    Mehdi Hasan:In your book, The Arab Awakening, which you wrote on this you also talk

    about the role of America, you talk about the role of Israel, you talk about the role of

    multinational corporations. Many people would say you sound like a conspiracy theorist.

    Tariq Ramadan: Completely.

    Tariq Ramadan: Who decided not to talk about the coup d'tat in order to support thearmy that's, the, the...

    Mehdi Hasan:Was the revolution itself against Mubarak run from the White House?

    Tariq Ramadan:No, no, please don't translate what I'm saying...

    Mehdi Hasan:I'm asking a question.

    Tariq Ramadan:What, no. What I'm saying in the book that even Mubarak knew about

    this mobilisation of cyber-dissidents, and this was known. What I am saying in the book

    that the only country in which I think it was not expected, paradoxically, was Syria.

    Because it took eight months, for the US administration to find the people with whom it

    can work.

    Mehdi Hasan:Some Egyptians I speak to say, he's patronising us because he basically

    is implying that we're pawns, we're dupes, of a Western plot. You talk about Google in

    your book. You say Google has exactly the same agenda as NATO.

    Tariq Ramadan:Tell me why Google organised the first meeting in Budapest of cyber-

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    dissidents coming from the Middle East two years before...?

    Mehdi Hasan: You tell me why.

    Tariq Ramadan:I am telling you that this is coming from a support. I don't buy this ideathat everything that happened in the Middle East was coming out of nothing. So this is

    what I'm saying. Now to tell me that I'm patronising the people, no. I think that the people

    were sincere, and the people were strong. And this is what I still call it, an awakening.

    Mehdi Hasan:The Muslim Brotherhood came to power in Egypt, won elections,

    parliamentary and presidential. Just before we go any further, you mentioned and I want

    to talk about your grandfather in a moment, that your grandfather founded the Muslim

    Brotherhood. Are you a member of the Muslim Brotherhood?

    Tariq Ramadan:I am not.

    Mehdi Hasan:Have you ever been a member of the Muslim Brotherhood?

    Tariq Ramadan:No. No. Never

    Mehdi Hasan:But would it be fair to say that when the Muslim Brotherhood won those

    elections, you weren't as worried, perhaps, as some people in the West, as some people

    in Egypt were, about the scary Brothers are going to come and take over the world and

    you thought actually, this could work?

    Tariq Ramadan:No. I was worried. But not for the same reasons. I was not worried

    because I [thought] that this is a terrorist group who are going to act against, you know,

    freedom and, and

    Mehdi Hasan:Against democracy and human rights.

    Tariq Ramadan:Yes. This was not my worry. My worry was that I said it, and I wrote it,

    it is in the book. Don't run for presidency, it's a trap.

    Mehdi Hasan:Surely Morsi's presidency was a disaster when it came to issues like

    transparency, dealing with sectarianism, protecting minorities, protecting human rights,

    redressing the security forces abuses, it was an absolute disaster. Both for the Muslim

    Brotherhood and for Egypt.

    Tariq Ramadan:One point which is essential for me, anything that they were sayingabout the economy, for me, was wrong. And anything that they were saying about, you

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    know, Egypt for the Egyptian was wrong.

    Mehdi Hasan:In July, in June last year, 20 leading Egyptian human rights groups wrote

    a letter to President Morsi, in which the accused him of trying to establish, quote, "a new

    authoritarian regime, in place of the Mubarak regime, of entrenching both religious and

    political despotism of paving the way for," quote, "a theocracy similar to the Iranian

    model". Pretty damming criticism.

    Tariq Ramadan:I don't think it's fair with what he was trying to do. We know now how

    much the deep state in Egypt was working, and the army behind the whole thing...

    Mehdi Hasan:He was working with the army though. President Morsi didn't do anything

    about the army. The Muslim Brotherhood wanted to coop the army, and use them in its

    own ..

    Tariq Ramadan:That's the point, No, no, no, no, no. He was not. He was not working

    with the army. The army was playing with him. This is another story. So the point here is

    the army was playing with Morsi. And he was very naive. And the Muslim Brothers were

    naive in the way they were in charge.

    Mehdi Hasan:Yes, but this naive word you use.Sorry. This naive word you use, when

    you're inciting mob violence, when you're inciting violence against Christians, or threatsagainst minorities...

    Tariq Ramadan:I don't, I don't buy that.

    Mehdi Hasan:... when you're telling your supporters to go and lay siege to a

    constitutional court, that's not naive.

    Tariq Ramadan:No, no, no, no, no. No, I think that you are not right on fact.

    Mehdi Hasan:That's what the human rights groups are saying on the ground.

    Tariq Ramadan:No, no, no, not, the human rights are. I want to know who said that,

    because this is also coming

    Mehdi Hasan:I'll give you an example, 20 Egyptian human rights groups said that,

    Amnesty International said that, Human Rights Watch said that, are they all part of a

    conspiracy?

    Tariq Ramadan: No, let me tell you, let me tell you something. No. No. Not a

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    conspiracy.

    Mehdi Hasan:When President Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, within months of

    becoming president, basically gave himself near dictatorial powers in November 2012,

    Mohammed El Baradei, one of the opposition leaders, I know you're not a fan of his,

    called him Egypt's new pharaoh. That wasn't naive That wasn't a mistake. That was a

    power grab.

    Tariq Ramadan:Yeah. That was wrong. That was wrong. But I am telling you after all

    what happened in Egypt, in one year, to try to change the country, without taking into

    account the role of the other players, the seculars, that's, that's the only thing...

    Mahdi Hasan:That's a very valid point, That's a very valid point. But let's deal with the

    actual toppling of him, and the coup, and the millions of people who took to the street,

    you called them, you say, "they were unwitting participants in a media military operation

    of the highest order."

    Tariq Ramadan:What I'm saying is that the army was very powerful in playing the

    media

    Mehdi Hasan:I agree. And don't dispute that, but having said that, there were millions

    of Egyptians on the street, who welcomed the army, what do you say to them?

    Tariq Ramadan:Completely. I'm saying that they were used by the army, even

    though... I'm saying...

    Mehdi Hasan:Millions of people are all used. They didn't come out there independent

    views, independent thoughts, they didn't have agency of their own. They were all

    pawns?

    Tariq Ramadan:No, no, no. They have no electricity. Every two hours no electricity. So,the people were pushed. Now if you think that the American were just observing what

    happened, and not supporting the army, it means that you don't know the story of Al-

    Sisi.

    Mehdi Hasan:Given that they were up against a deep state. Given they were up

    against the IMF. Given that they were up again the White House. Why then did the

    Muslim Brotherhood perform so badly? And how big a hit have Islamist parties taken

    from what happened in Egypt? It wasn't a very good ad for Islamists being in power was

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    it? The year Morsi was in power.

    Tariq Ramadan:I think you're right on that what is coming, or came over the last 15

    years from the Islamists is very poor. The people that we have to blame, it's coming from

    scholars, intellectuals, who are now falling into a trap, which is this polarisation between

    secularists and Islamists. Not dealing with the five main problems that we have.

    Corruption. The nature of the state. What does it mean, a civil state with Islamic

    reference? Second is the role of the army. The third is the economic system. And social

    ustice, the role of woman. And culture and arts.

    Mehdi Hasan:Yasmin Alibhai Brown is a columnist and author. He's a founder member

    of British Muslims for Secular Democracy. Yasmin, you're a self described secular

    Muslim, liberal Muslim, were you cheering when the Muslim Brotherhood were removedfrom office in Egypt?

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: No I don't, I think, you know, I think the way the army acted

    was wrong. But I think I don't get from you, Tariq, any sense at all, you do say, of course

    they made mistakes, I want more than that. I want a really clear sense from you that the

    Muslim Brotherhood, itself, knowingly failed and betrayed the people of Egypt.

    Tariq Ramadan: They failed. And I think that I said this. Now if you want me just for the

    sake of pleasing you, saying everything has to be on them and to blame them. I'm sorry.I am not going to say this. Why? Because there are other factors and actors that pushed

    them to fail.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay, you made that point. Let me bring in...

    Tariq Ramadan: Just, Do you acknowledge this? Do you acknowledge the fact that the

    deep state didn't let democracy work in Egypt? Say yes or no?

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: No. It was both of them. Both sides

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay Let's bring in Anas Altikriti who is the chief executive of the British

    Muslim Group, the Cordova Foundation. His father is one of the leaders of the Muslim

    Brotherhood Party in Iraq I believe. Anas do you share Tariq's - Tariq said he has

    criticised the Muslim Brotherhood mistakes, human rights abuses - you would accept

    that Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt did a pretty bad job in that 12 months, on their own.

    Put aside all the army abused. Put aside the deep state stuff. We acknowledge that. we

    can agree on that.

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    Anas Altikriti: Considering all the constraints and all the limitations and the timeframe

    that they were offered, I think that they actually did quite well. The question that I'm quite

    surprised you're not asking, is now we've had the Muslim Brotherhood, basically

    imprisoned and banned, and proscribed for eight, nine months. Egypt is a hundred times

    more worse situation, worse situation than it was a year ago. It's officially bankrupt. It's

    on the verge of civil war, there are abuses like we never saw during the time of Mubarak.

    Mehdi Hasan: 20 Egyptian human rights groups who were involved in the revolution,

    wrote a public letter in June last year saying what is happening now is as bad as under

    Mubarak, under the Muslim Brotherhood. That's pretty shameful. The Muslim

    Brotherhood guys were in prison under Mubarak. They take power. And then they start

    carrying out human rights abuses, how does that work?

    Anas Altikriti: Amnesty themselves acknowledge the fact that during the time of the

    issuing of that report, there was not one single political prisoner. At this moment of time

    we have 13,000 political prisoners. Amnesty international itself, acknowledge the fact,

    that during the time of Morsi, in terms of, you talked about sectarianism, there were

    precisely two churches that were burnt. And precisely 12 Christians that were killed. No

    one knows by whom...

    Mehdi Hasan:There are other reports of far more attacks on Christians. On the Muslim

    Brotherhood Facebook were there, or were there not all sorts of incitement and threats

    made against Coptic Christians?

    Anas Altikriti:I honestly Mehdi have never ever looked up the Facebook page for the

    Muslim Brotherhood. (laugh) Seriously. No, I'll, I'll...

    Mehdi Hasan:That's what is out there.

    Anas Altikriti:But Mehdi, but Mehdi, I'll tell you this. No. No. I'll tell you this. At no stage

    in modern time Egypt, were the Christians given as many seats, like the time of Morsi.

    Mehdi Hasan:Let's bring in Professor Alan Johnson, who is a writer and an author. He's

    a senior fellow at BICOM, the Britain Israel Communication and Research Centre. Do

    you want to respond uh to what you've been hearing from Anas?

    Alan Johnson: I think what we're hearing tonight is people who are in denial about the

    scale of the defeat that Islamism suffered in 2013. It took communism 70 years to show

    it was an exhausted political project. It took Islamism one. Let's register for ourselves

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    how far they fell...

    Mehdi Hasan:But do you deny the point Tariq has made, that there were also outside

    forces involved. That the United States government was neutral in this. That the deep

    state that Tariq identifies wasn't neutral in this. The Muslim Brotherhood weren't

    operating on their own were they? Surely?

    Alan Johnson:I'm sure that the Egyptian army, from the moment Morsi was elected,

    were planning how they could regain power. That's what that Egyptian army do. We

    certainly agree on that. But let's, as we're talking...

    Tariq Ramadan:This point...

    Alan Johnson:As we're talking.

    Mehdi Hasan:Isn't that quite a crucial point if you're evaluating...

    Tariq Ramadan:That's the main point

    Alan Johnson:It's certainly part of the picture. If we're talking about Islamists.

    Remember how high the hopes were at the beginning of the year. This was going to be

    some sort of equivalent to Christian democracy's role to modernise, to democratise, it

    was going to be a whole new historical phase in which Islamist forces, Muslim

    Brotherhood-led, or influenced, were going to take the region into a new world. We are

    so far from that now. It will never be glad morning ever again for Islamism

    Mehdi Hasan:You often get very upset when people raise the issue that you're the

    grandson of the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. Do you think that's unfairly raised?

    Tariq Ramadan: I'm proud of who he was and what he did. I don't have a problem with

    this. Very often when the people are labelling me, as the grandson, they haven't read

    about him. They don't know about him. And they have this very simplistic picture, he was

    an Islamist, a back word against the West. I say I'm sorry, before telling me as an insult

    that I am the grandson of Hassan al-Banna you better read a bit about him.

    Mehdi Hasan: People who have read about Hassan al-Banna say that, in addition to all

    the things you say about him, he also took inspiration from European fascist movements,

    from Hitler, from Mussolini...

    Tariq Ramadan:That's nonsense. Rubbish. He said exactly the opposite.

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    Mehdi Hasan:He praised the quote, "German working man Hitler", for quote, "immense

    impact on world politics". He praised the German Reich for protecting German blood in

    their veins...And said Muslims should do the same.

    Tariq Ramadan:That's not true. That's not true.

    Mehdi Hasan:He didn't write that?

    Tariq Ramadan:No, no, he didn't...

    Mehdi Hasan: False.

    Tariq Ramadan:No, no, that's completely the opposite.

    Mehdi Hasan:I'm not pretending to be an expert on Hassan al-Banna, you are. Jessica

    Stern of Harvard University, who has written a great deal, several books on Islamism

    and extremism, she says that Al Banna was quote, "strongly influenced by revolutionary

    totalitarian movements, and a fascination with violence. The Brotherhood established

    links with Nazi Germany, had a paramilitary wing which took on fascist like slogans and

    practices". Is she wrong? She's totally wrong?

    Tariq Ramadan:That, that's completely wrong.

    Mehdi Hasan:She doesn't know what she's talking about.

    Tariq Ramadan:This is where you have something which is propaganda. So this is

    clear.

    Mehdi Hasan:So when he wrote in 1935, in Our Message, a pamphlet that Islam has

    ordained quote, "the conquest of countries..." and has, quote, "sent out conquerors to

    carry out the most gracious and blessed of conquests..." what was he referring to?

    Tariq Ramadan:No he was talking about, you know, the expansion of Islam. So, so this

    is something...

    Mehdi Hasan: From military conquest.

    Tariq Ramadan:No. No. Not military conquest. but he was saying, we will resist the

    Zionist project in Israel, if you want me to tell you about the organisation and why I

    disagree is the way this was translated in political terms within the organisation. And this

    is why I think, even the Muslim Brotherhood today, haven't evolved enough from this

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    position.

    Mehdi Hasan:Well on the Muslim Brotherhood today, just going back to our panel very

    briefly. Anas you mentioned the locking up of the Muslim Brotherhood. The prescription

    declaring them a terrorist group - Is the Muslim Brotherhood now finished in Egypt?

    Anas Altikriti:Actually it's funny you should ask that, because the only winner that

    comes out of this is the Muslim Brotherhood. And I'll tell you why. Just before Morsi was

    toppled by a military coup, a survey showed that his popularity had fallen to below 20

    percent. The military coup and the subsequent crackdown on the Egyptian people have

    actually pumped up the popularity of the Muslim Brotherhood and of Morsi. The military

    coup in a very ironic and funny way, has come and salvaged the Muslim Brotherhood,

    actually Morsi is quite popular.

    Mehdi Hasan:Well let me bring in Alan Johnson. Tariq Ramadan says the people who

    bring up the Muslim Brotherhood's past and accuse it of being extremist, of

    undemocratic, are engaging in propaganda. it's always propaganda though. It's, you can

    never...

    Tariq Ramadan: This is not exactly what I said, right, though.

    Alan Johnson:... you can never nail Tariq down. It's always I didn't say that. they'repropagandists don't believe them. Look. It's, there's book upon book upon book about

    the links between Islamism and the inter-war period and European fascism.

    Mehdi Hasan:And it's a very important point this, do you believe the Muslim

    Brotherhood today is a fascist organisation?

    Alan Johnson:No. No. But I think there's a problem with democracy. In 2005 the

    Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Leader said this about democracy. "it's like a pair of

    slippers, you put them on when you go to the bathroom, when you get there you take

    them off." This, this is not...

    Mehdi Hasan:Yasmin you're nodding. You're nodding there, is that...?

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:I think that's true, and I think what's happened to the Muslim

    Brotherhood, as we know, in most Islamic countries, politics and democracy stops when

    somebody comes in to power.

    Anas Altikriti:Which countries are ruled by the Muslim Brotherhood, Yasmin?

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    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:No, no, no, I'm just saying...

    Anas Altikriti:Prosecuted every single Muslim country...

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: So I do agree with you that we could have waited for that.

    Mehdi Hasan: Hamas is regarded as an off-shoot of the Muslim Brotherhood...

    Anas Altikriti: And Hamas is a very important point. Listen. Since 1991 when Islamic

    parties were allowed to be part of the democratic process, they took part fair and square.

    And on every single occasion they won fair and square. And on every single occasion

    they were then stifled, and driven to the extremes. Such as the case in Hamas. The

    world did wrong by Gaza when Hamas won fair and square, and then they isolated Gaza

    what they did, they proved to every single one who belied, who did not believe in

    democracy, that actually, al-Qaeda was right. That al-Qaeda are right.

    Mehdi Hasan:But that didn't just justify the Hamas mis-management of Gaza, or the

    human rights abuses in Gaza, did it?

    Anas Altikriti:What, what human rights?

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:Oh come on.

    Mehdi Hasan: There no human rights abuses in Gaza under Hamas?

    Anas Altikriti:Hang on. hang on.

    Mehdi Hasan: Has Hamas committed human rights abuses in Gaza? Yes or no.

    Anas Altikriti:I'm pretty sure they have, similar to every single surrounding country to

    Gaza.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay. Well that's an answer.

    Anas Altikriti:No different.

    Tariq Ramadan: I have a problem with the way you are asking questions because...

    Mehdi Hasan:I'm sure you do. [LAUGHTER]

    Tariq Ramadan: I do.

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    Mehdi Hasan:Yeah.

    Tariq Ramadan:I do because, what was done to Hamas and the people of Gaza, after

    the election, it's as if you chose the wrong people, now you're going to be punished.

    Mehdi Hasan:You and I can agree that what was done to Hamas was wrong. You and I

    can agree what was done to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt by the military was wrong.

    But where you and I seem to differ is you don't seem to think that Hamas in Gaza, or the

    Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, did that much wrong

    Tariq Ramadan:I said there were not only mistakes but there are things that were

    completely wrong in the way they managed the country...

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Unacceptable. Unacceptable. They were unacceptable.

    Tariq Ramadan:It depends what you are talking about. It depends what you are talking

    about.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay.

    Tariq Ramadan:Anyway. Anything which has to do with human rights, if this is there,

    it's unacceptable and I agree.

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:Thank you.

    Tariq Ramadan:Coming from whoever. There is no discussion about that.

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:Thank you. That's all I wanted.

    Tariq Ramadan: The point is that the way you ask the question is as if because they are

    things that were done wrong... it means that we are taking them accountable and you

    forget the whole picture.

    Mehdi Hasan:This is my problem with the word mistakes. Shouldn't you hold these

    groups to higher standards, if they claim to be following God, and Islam and the word of

    God, etc etc? Shouldn't they be held to higher standards?

    Tariq Ramadan:Yes.

    Mehdi Hasan:And do you think they've met those standards?

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    Tariq Ramadan:No.

    Mehdi Hasan:No. So isn't that a real problem?

    Tariq Ramadan:Are they clear answers?

    Mehdi Hasan:They are clear answers. Because it's the first time you've said no without

    saying, but about the deep state, what about Israel, what about this.

    Tariq Ramadan:No. I'm just...

    Mehdi Hasan:This is my point, just judge them on their own actions is what I'm asking.

    If there were no external actors, if there was no America intervening, if there was no IMF

    demanding austerity in return for loans. If there was no Israeli occupation of Gaza and...

    Tariq Ramadan:So there is lots of if here, yeah...

    Mehdi Hasan: Yes. It's important. It's important on a conceptual level.

    Tariq Ramadan:Okay

    Mehdi Hasan:You're an academic. On a conceptual level, here is the question. Do you

    think then that the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, or Hamas in Gaza, or any of theseother Islamist groups in power would have done a good job? They would have been

    fine? Had it not been for, had these factors not been there, that you constantly say.

    Tariq Ramadan: I, I think they would have done better. But I can't judge the people after

    one year the way it was in Egypt.

    Mehdi Hasan:On that specific note, we have to take a break. In part two, we'll be

    talking to Professor Tariq Ramadan, who is one of the world's leading authorities on

    Islam and the West, on whether there is a clash between Islam and the West. We'll also

    be hearing from our very patient audience here in the Oxford Union. Join us after the

    break.

    Part two

    Mehdi Hasan:Welcome back to Head to Headon Al Jazeera, we're talking about Islam,

    Islamism, political Islam, with Professor Tariq Ramadan, one of the world's leading

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    Muslim thinkers, a professor here at Oxford University.

    Tariq is the region of Islam in need of a reformation in the same way that European

    Christians underwent a few hundred years ago?

    Tariq Ramadan:No. I think that this is a wrong comparison. In historical terms, in

    theological terms, I would say what I'm advocating is not to reform Islam. Islam doesn't

    need a reform. What I'm advocating is to reform the Muslim minds. Meaning that the

    problem is not in the texts, the problem is not the Quran, the Quran for the Muslims is

    the eternal revelation. It's done in prophetic traditions. The problem that we have is with

    the readers. Is the way we interpret the text sometimes, and we are not able to

    understand things into the historical context, and in our specific environment. So

    reforming the Muslim minds, yes. Reforming Islam, no way.

    Mehdi Hasan:How big a problem do you think it is in 2014, for practicing believing

    pious Muslims, whatever you want to call them, to integrate into modern European

    societies. Into the European mainstream, in the UK, in France, in Germany?

    Tariq Ramadan: I don't think that the word integration is the right word. You know, I was

    born and raised in Switzerland. I'm a European by culture. And people keep on

    repeating, when are you going to be integrated? I say, I'm sorry the problem is that your

    mind is not integrating me, I'm already here, at home. So we are at home. The successof integration is to stop talking about integration. So we are in the past integration

    process, and we are dealing with people who don't want in fact to acknowledge the fact

    that Britain, that Germany, that France, that the States are pluralistic societies where

    Muslim citizens are part of the future of the country.

    Mehdi Hasan:Is there no clash at all between so-called liberal secular enlightenment

    values of Europe, and on the other hand Islamic values, Islamic principles, core Islamic

    beliefs. There's no tension?

    Tariq Ramadan: No there is no tension. There are tensions between dogmatic minds.

    So you have dogmatic secularists, they look at secularism as a new religion, they are

    transforming the legal system in need to a new religion. And they are telling you this is

    the only way to be free is to be free the way we are.

    Mehdi Hasan:There are genuine clashes going on, on the ground between people who

    are not far right wing xenophobes...

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    Tariq Ramadan:Such as what?

    Mehdi Hasan:So for example many, quote unquote, 'liberals,' who are not racists, are

    not anti-Muslim, but did have a problem over some Muslims reactions to the Danish

    cartoons, to the movie about the prophet. There were lots of protests about that. that

    was a issue of free speech.

    Tariq Ramadan:That's right. Yes.

    Mehdi Hasan: There was a question about 'can Muslims handle the kind of free speech

    we see in Europe nowadays?'

    Tariq Ramadan:This is why I was saying there are clashes between dogmatic minds.

    Meaning secular, dogmatic secularists, but also literalists, and sometimes dogmatic

    Muslims, not understanding the environment.

    Mehdi Hasan:Where do you stand on that issue?

    Tariq Ramadan:I stand in the middle.

    Mehdi Hasan:So...

    Tariq Ramadan:In the middle...

    Mehdi Hasan:So what does that mean in practical terms? Would you [have suggested

    a ban] on the Danish cartoons?

    Tariq Ramadan:In practical terms, I was exactly at the time the cartoon crisis started in

    Denmark. And I was saying to the Muslims look, don't react to this. Take an intellectual

    critical distance. Tell them we don't like it, and leave it. you don't have to apologise for

    being Muslims. Now you have to understand two things. First you live in a country and

    it's not only important to be a citizen. You need to get two things that are important. You

    are talking about the standards. Ethics of citizenship. Knowing that you don't only have

    rights, you have duties. And the duties is your contribution. And the second thing is the

    sense of belonging. And the sense of belonging is the three Ls that I'm talking. Know

    abide the by the LAW of the country, know the LANGUAGE of the country and be

    LOYAL to the country.

    Mehdi Hasan:But you can abide by the law and also call for it to be changed. Gender

    segregation in the form of separate seating for male and female students at publicevents, in particular Islamic society, become very controversial in this country. Where do

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    you stand on that?

    Tariq Ramadan:My position on this, from an Islamic perspective, is that nothing is

    imposing into the Muslims to separate in public venue, when this is what I said 20 years

    ago, 25 years ago, 30 years ago I was saying this to the Muslims. Go ahead, there is no

    problem. I think that this is not the business of the government.

    Mehdi Hasan:Let's talk Sharia law. big subject in the West. Sitting in that very seat not

    very long ago, your fellow Oxford academic, atheist in chief, Professor Richard Dawkins

    told me that Sharia law was a threat to human rights, because among other things, one

    of the things he cited, was that under Islamic Sharia law, if you try and convert away

    from Islam to convert to Christianity or Judaism or atheism, the punishment is death.

    Tariq Ramadan:Yes, the problem with Dawkins is he has to learn much more about

    religions in Islam. He is as knowledgeable in science that he's ignorant in religions. All

    that what he's saying about Sharia is coming from media articles. It's not coming from an

    in-depth study.

    Mehdi Hasan:They're all Muslim majority countries that have the death penalty of

    Apostasy on their statute books are there not?

    Tariq Ramadan:Yes. But this is what, once again, if you take one interpretation andyou can do whatever with Christianity, Judaism and any, even Buddhism, you can just

    have very dogmatic views. You have to take the whole picture and to study. For me,

    Sharia is not a set of law, Sharia is a way. It's the way towards faithfulness and

    principles and it has to do with dignity and justice and freedom. But I understand that in

    our societies, in the West, the word is used in a way, and sometimes, you know

    literalists, are using it in a very...

    Mehdi Hasan:Muslims.

    Tariq Ramadan:... Yes. Exactly. And this is where we need to have an internal debate.

    Mehdi Hasan:And another capital punishment under quote unquote Sharia law, is often

    the punishment for adultery, that if people cheat on their partners in some Islamic

    countries, the penalty is stoning. And you got into a very heated argument, back in, I

    think 2003 when Nicholas Sarkozy, who later went on to become president of France, in

    which he demanded you condemn it and say it was wrong. And you would only say that

    you support a moratorium to stoning of women, in particular, in the Muslim majority

    world. A lot of people said that was a cop out by you, why didn't you come out and say

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    no it's wrong, in the same that you said apostasy, death penalty is wrong, it's also wrong

    for adultery?

    Tariq Ramadan:There are texts in the Quran talking about corporal punishment and

    death penalty. And there are texts in the prophetic traditions talking about stoning. My

    position on this: What do the texts say? What are the conditions in which social and

    political context? And we need to have an internal debate.

    Mehdi Hasan:While you're having the debate, why not state your position, which is?

    Tariq Ramadan:I am against this.

    Mehdi Hasan:Because it, why? Because it's wrong? Or because it's outdated? Or

    because...? What's the actual reason?

    Tariq Ramadan:Because all the conditions and the understanding, the very essence of

    the texts and the objectives is not respected if we implement this. I'm not saying this to

    please Sarkozy or to please a Western audience, I'm saying it in the name of Islam.

    Mehdi Hasan:Alan Johnson is a journalist. You wrote an article recently, in which you

    accused Tariq Ramadan of being a coward for only calling for a moratorium on this

    issue. He says he's trying to win a debate within the Muslim community, you're saying

    he's a coward

    Alan Johnson:Yes. I mean I...

    Tariq Ramadan: Thank you by the way. That's, that's great. [LAUGHS]

    Alan Johnson:Yeah, I think it was cowardly. I don't think when women are being

    stoned, I think it's up to democrats to take a firm position and take a stand, and stand up

    for those women who are being stoned. Muslims are integrating, there's a silent

    revolution going on you're not offering those people who are trying to make that silent

    revolution, anything useful.

    Tariq Ramadan:My position on this is from within the universe of reference as Muslims

    to move on and it's not going to please you but you need to understand that Muslims will

    get to the point where they understand the the position...

    Alan Johnson:Why don't you lead it. why don't you lead and make the case?

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    Tariq Ramadan:Let me, let me, let me. I'm not...

    Alan Johnson:You've got a lot of moral authority, you could lead the debate.

    Tariq Ramadan:It's not for you to tell me if I lead or not, I'm just trying to share viewswith my fellow Muslims. When in the States, in 2000, look at this. I said if I was an

    American I would be against death penalty in this society. I got Muslim leaders coming to

    me saying how can you say this because this is Islamic. You know what the Fiqh Council

    now is saying, we are for a technical moratorium on death penalty in the States. Why

    don't you criticise Amnesty International, saying in the States we are for moratorium on

    death penalty? Why? Are they cowards?

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay let him answer briefly, and then let Alan come back in. Very briefly

    Alan.

    Alan Johnson:So you say it's not an issue in the UK of stoning. Absolutely right. But

    many things that are issues, let's take for instance, you write a forward to a book of

    Fatwas by Qaradawi, Qaradawi stands for, 'it's ok to beat your wife, as long as you don't

    leave a wound'.

    Tariq Ramadan:On many issues, I take, I took position against Qaradawi, position. this

    is written, and I said it, and I said it to him, and him publicly he was against my position.Now, let me tell you something. That for anyone who is living in the West, use of

    Qaradawi, with his contribution made this Muslims in the West understand better their

    religion, and their relationship to the West. I'm not supporting all his views, but I would

    never let anybody say that all what he did after 50 years working in the Islamic field, that

    he's the one who is a dogmatic mind.

    Mehdi Hasan:Let me bring in Yasmin Alibhai Brown, journalist, author, founder member

    of British Muslims for Secular Democracy. Yasmin, a lot of people, Muslim and non

    Muslim say Tariq is part of the solution, Tariq is helping Muslims modernise, reform etc...

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:And he is.

    Mehdi Hasan:and others like Alan say he's part of the problem...

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:No.

    Mehdi Hasan:... he's not part of the... Where do you stand?

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:I admire a lot of what Tariq has done. And some of what you

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    said was persuasive. But I do want to hear from you that there is no moratorium on, on

    stoning. It is wrong. And it should never happen. I want to hear a direct sentence like

    that.

    Mehdi Hasan: Go on then answer the question. Can you give her that sentence?

    Tariq Ramadan:No I'm not going to give this sentenceWhat is wrong is the dogmatic

    way you are, you put the questions. It's this dogmatic way. No debates. Just condemn.

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Do you. Stoning anybody is wrong

    Tariq Ramadan: Let me tell you something. Between you and me, as if there is nobody

    here. (LAUGHS). Even stoning is problematic, relying on the scriptural sources. if you

    think by saying I condemn and that's it, without coming to the scriptural sources, starting

    a discussion about the reasons, the context, history, this is the way you change

    mindsets.

    Mehdi Hasan:Anas Altikriti you work in British Muslim communities, you've worked

    across the Middle Eeast. you would accept that there is a real tension, surely, is there

    not over issues like corporal punishment, over issues like free speech, and the rest,

    women's rights?

    Anas Altikriti:Within the Muslim community, not only through throughout society, but in

    the Muslim community, of course there is. There's that kind of intellectual debate that we

    need to have. And we need to open the doors for. But what I find extremely unhelpful is

    the demand of Muslims to condemn their scripture, their religion. We don't go around

    demanding of Christians to condemn the bible. We don't go around demanding of Jews

    to condemn the Torah simply because there is something there, if taken out of context, it

    doesn't fit with my tastes and preferences in 2014.

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:It is simple to me. Killing a person and stoning a person is

    wrong.

    Anas Altikriti:Well is there a scale whereby we say that injecting someone in Texas

    and leaving them to writhe...

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:..It's wrong.

    Anas Altikriti:... Well are you demanding of the American government to say that it's

    wrong...

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    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:Yes I have joined lots of protests...

    Anas Altikriti: Do you have that kind of, do you have that kind of debate?

    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:Of course we do. Of course we do. That's silly.

    Anas Altikriti:... I think what Tariq Ramadan, and I think that that is something we

    should take stock of. There is an internal debate. If we shut down the public debate, that

    internal debate will stop. Simply because, what'll happen is the people will start pointing

    to Tariq Ramadan and accusing him of being a sellout. We can't have that. There are

    certain issues with British society which is my society, my kid's society...By the way,

    which I totally disagree with. But I allow there to be a debate a social debate over time,

    so that we come to a particular point whereby smoking is not allowed in public places,

    whereby alcohol is not sold after a particular hour. And so on and so forth. We need

    time. We need to allow for that debate to take place. We need to give it oxygen. We

    mustn't be hypocritical about this. We must understand more. We must know what we're

    talking about.

    Mehdi Hasan:You've all been very patient, you've listened to us discuss Islamism,

    Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood, Islam in Europe, Sharia law, stoning etc... free

    speech. Let's go to the lady in the third row with glasses on your head to my left.

    Audience participant 1:Hi, you discuses in your writing the necessity of shifting

    authority within the Islamic world today. Where do you think the authority should lie? And

    what are the necessary qualifications of authority?

    Tariq Ramadan:If we look at what is happening in the West, today, we have sciences,

    but there is a lack of ethics. And you can't just ask the Muslim scholars to come with the

    Quran and the Sunnah and to give us the final word in sciences. They have to rely on

    other scholars, and this is why I don't call them specialists. I call them "Ulemah Al waqi

    wal siagh" meaning these are people who know about science, medicine. And in

    medicine, Muslims did very well. They are sitting together and they are coming with legal

    opinion, they rely on the knowledge of the medical doctors. I want us to do the same

    when it comes to when it comes to food, when it comes to everything which has to do

    with experimental sciences, and also human sciences. And I think that there is a

    problem of authority. There is an authority crisis within the Muslim majority countries,

    and the Muslim world.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay, let's take one more question, gentleman there in the tie,

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    Audience participant 2:Actually I have a unique question about what's the dealing,

    and do you think that the West are dealing with the Egyptian incident different with what

    happened in Ukraine And what's the reason for this?

    Tariq Ramadan:I think it's quite obvious that the West is dealing with or have been

    dealing with the Muslim Brotherhood and what happened in Egypt in a way which was

    not fair for the people, the civilians who were killed. Islamists are perceived as a danger,

    a threat, the question is not to know if Muslims are ready for democracy, it, the true

    question is is the West ready for Muslims to experience democracy?

    Mehdi Hasan:Gentleman here.

    Audience participant 3:Yeah I've just arrived from Egypt and one question I'd like to

    ask you, which I know many Egyptians would like to know is how do you compare the

    leadership of the Muslim Brotherhood in your grandfather's time, with the leadership

    today? Do you think that the supreme guide, now in prison, does he have, does he have

    the same kind of management and leadership uh style, as your grandfather? Or, or did

    the Muslim Brotherhood somehow lose the plot, or or deviate from your grandfather's

    thinking at some point?

    Tariq Ramadan:He was clearly a charismatic leader, was full of religious knowledge,

    and he was a religious reference. He had a vision, and he was very pragmatic. So this isone thing. Now he had lots of power within the organisation, very old people were

    running the Muslim Brotherhood, the counsel was made of people that we can question

    the competence when it comes to the political understanding and the political decisions.

    So I would say that some of the young people within the Muslim Brotherhood were

    challenging this authority, by saying you are out of touch.

    Mehdi Hasan:You said at the start, you don't believe they're a terrorist group, or a

    violent organisation, Some of them, do you think that's become a self fulfilling prophecy?

    Tariq Ramadan:No, I think that they are pushed to become regularised, which by the

    way, it's exactly what Nasser did in the '50s. That today, more than thirty thousand

    people are in jail, there is torture, people are killed, and this is just unacceptable. Anyone

    in the West who is supporting democracy, should be clear that this has to be

    condemned and we cannot support anything which has to do with Al-Sisi a dictator, and

    is as bad as Mubarak. That's full point. No discussion.

    Mehdi Hasan:And yet he has amazing high approval ratings from Egyptians. That's a

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    problem.

    Tariq Ramadan: Oh he will get 99 percent, or 98 percent, because they love him. It's a

    democratic election. You buy that?

    Mehdi Hasan: No, I don't, I'm not talking about free for elections, I'm talking about the

    fact that he is a clearly a popular figure in Egypt. You wouldn't deny that?

    Tariq Ramadan:No I think that's the problem, that's true.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay. Let's go to the audience here, gentleman there with his hand up.

    Audience participant 4:A lot of the criticisms you have of the Brotherhood appear to

    be tactical, appear to be strategic, appear to be organisational, appear to be structural,

    intergenerational, what do you disagree with them in terms of objectives and goals?

    Where do you lie with, ok their board vision and goal? And what are your specific clear

    cut disagreements with them in that regard?

    Tariq Ramadan:The vision of the state, and the discussion about the state, what is the

    civil state with Islamic reference? I have a problem with this. The economy choice, which

    type of economy, I think that the problem that I have is that what I understood, from the

    very beginning, of what was the vision of political Islam, was something which was close

    to liberation theology, is not there. At all..

    The second, the third thing has to do with the social issues, and the way we are dealing

    with women and education. I'm not talking about religious education. I'm talking about

    state education for all. Where is this? I don't get that.

    Mehdi Hasan:We've had lots of questions from Muslims. Are there non-Muslims who

    want to ask a question. Gentlemen...

    Audience participant 5:A Sudanese legal scholar, and human rights expert here once

    said that the safest place for a religious person, and he included Muslims in that, is a

    secular state. Do you agree with that claim?

    Tariq Ramadan:It depends, the type of secular state you have. Why? Why? Because

    China and Russia were secular states where being a religious man or woman was for

    you to face discrimination. So don't idealize a secular state. If I had some of the French

    people in charge, as secularists, I would go and get out of France. Because the way

    they deal with secularists is just a new dogmatic religion.

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    Mehdi Hasan: Ok, ok,

    Tariq Ramadan:So if by this you mean, a secular state where all the religions are

    treated equally and they treated by law, what I am expecting from Britain, what I'm

    expecting from France, is to apply the secular system, one hundred percent equal rights

    for all. If this is what you mean. Yes.

    Mahdi Hasan:Okay . Lady there with the scarf.

    Audience participant 6:Considering we're yet to have an example of secularism and

    democracy working in the MENA region, and more examples of actually Islam and

    democracy working, such as Tunisia, which is often forgotten. We've got one of the first

    democratic constitutions in MENA. Is the premise of this whole show completely kind of

    invalid considering it's actually the secularists that are yet to prove themselves in our

    region?

    Tariq Ramadan:Secularists in the Middle East has nothing to do with secularists in the

    West. While we are talking here about a democratic process, all the secularists in the

    Middle Eeast, were dictators, and even in Turkey, the people who are acknowledging

    and promoting secularism, were people who were supporting the army and the army

    was against democracy.

    Mehdi Hasan:Okay let's take a question from the back of the hall, the lady there with

    the glasses.

    Audience participant 7:Hi, you mentioned that there was a crisis of authority and I

    think that you continually argue for contextualisation, but don't you think an argument for

    a contextualisation and then mentioning that there's a crisis of authority, will lead us to

    descend into volatilise and how will you then address a crisis of authority if you're being

    so relativistic?

    Tariq Ramadan: Uh that's, that's a very good question. And this is where we need this

    internal debate. Because I'm not going to say because I live in Britain, that's fine to drink

    alcohol and to go to pubs just to be within the culture. No. This is not going to happen in

    my discourse. Now, what I'm saying is that we live in societies where you need to get a

    better understanding of the history, collective psychology, and the culture. Even in, in

    Islamic terms, the term that you have to deal with the environment is in "Al-Maaroof"

    known by the people as being good, let us go for that.

    Mehdi Hasan:Let me finish by asking you this question. You're someone who has

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    written a lot about bridging the so called gap between Muslims and the West. You're

    saying there is no gap, Muslims are here. Take us seriously. Is there one thing you

    would say that Islam has to offer to Europe, that Europe doesn't have on its own, that

    Islam can give to Europe?

    Tariq Ramadan:Three things.

    Mehdi Hasan:Oh three ok.

    Professor Tariq Ramadan:Yeah. The first one is in fact by our very presence, to help

    the West to reconcile itself with it's very values. And I'm always saying this to Muslims,

    help your country to reconcile itself with the values of pluralism, equality, and to act

    against racist, and this patronising perception that, yes, you are British but not yet as us.

    So we are going to change that. and this is our first contribution.

    The second one is the spiritual side, very meaning of life, the way they see us practicing,

    questioning, giving some meaning to our life. This is a good contribution. Life is not

    about being economically or socially successful. It is to get this meaning. So the spiritual

    dimension.

    And the third one, is to bring ethics into the discussion, that you can say there are things

    that you cannot do to nature, to your neighbour, and I want this to bring this, it doesn'tmean that we have the monopoly. But our presence is a good reminder. So, I am done

    with any discourse about integration. I'm opening the door for contribution, and these are

    three things that are important.

    Mehdi Hasan: Well on that positive note. Professor Tariq Ramadan, thank you very

    much for joining us tonight on Head to Head.

    Tariq Ramadan:Thank you, thank you for inviting me.

    Mehdi Hasan: Thank you very much to our panel, for their contribution. Thank you very

    much to the audience here in the Oxford Union, and to the audience at home for

    watching. Head to Headwill be back on Al Jazeera next week. Good night.

    Audience:[APPLAUSE}


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