Muslim Council of Britain

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The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) "is an umbrella organisation dedicated to the common good, to the betterment of the community and country. It was inaugurated - after several years of wide-ranging consultation and careful planning - on November 23 1997 at the Brent Town Hall in Wembley by representatives of more than 250 Muslim organisations from all parts of Britain including Northern Ireland. The recent fifth annual general meeting (April 28 2002) affirmed the MCB's status as a vibrant coalition of grassroot organisations and institutions and individual talent and skills that is making a positive and constructive contribution to meeting the needs and the aspirations of the Muslim community in a period of recurring crises and anxious optimism." [1]

Its affiliated organisations of mosques, charities and Islamic associations participate in the organisation's General Assembly. The General Assembly elects a 'Central Working Committee' who elects the Secretary General and office bearers. Elections take place every two years and the term of a Secretary General cannot extend beyond two terms.

Funding

The MCB's core funding comes from its affiliates whose fees entitle organisations to participate in the decision making. MCB also seeks funding from government and other bodies for a variety of project work. Such as its Faith in Employment Project.

Current personalities

Controversies

Inayat Bunglawala from the MCB notes that The Islamist, by Ed Husain (Penguin, 2007) "provides a very misleading description of the Muslim Council of Britain which according to him (p167) is merely a front for the Jamaat-i-Islami and the Muslim Brotherhood." [3]

Contact

Web: http://www.mcb.org.uk

Resources and articles

Related SourceWatch

References

  1. The Muslim Council of Britain – its history, structure and workings, Muslim Council of Britain, accessed July 7, 2007.
  2. Muslim leaders join condemnation, BBC News, accessed July 7, 2007.
  3. 'The Islamist', by Ed Husain, Penguin, 2007, pp 288, Muslim Council of Britain, accessed July 7, 2007.