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Gloves are off as Ken accuses Boris of 7/7 smear on Islam

Pippa Crerar, Political Correspondent
10.04.08

Boris Johnson today accused the Mayor of "demeaning" his office by suggesting Mr Johnson had smeared Islam after the London bombings.

The Tory candidate said he took "deep offence" at Ken Livingstone's claim he had said the Koran was "inherently" violent.

However, the Mayor insisted Mr Johnson's remarks - in contrast to his own rousing response to the 7 July attacks - showed his true reaction to the tragedy.

In the first radio hustings on LBC radio between the three main candidates, Mr Johnson insisted he would have issued "exactly the same" kind of remarks after the bombings, which killed 52 people, as Mr Livingstone had if he had been running the city at the time.

"What Londoners want in the event of a tragedy of that kind... is someone who will speak for the city and give a voice to our defiance and our unwillingness to submit to that kind of terror and kind of cowardly attack," he said.

However, the Mayor claimed: "I know what Boris would have said because he wrote it in the Spectator the following week. Very different. I said this is a criminal act by a handful of men. It doesn't define a faith or an ideology.

"What you said, Boris, was Islam was the problem... And the Koran is inherently violent. I actually made certain that we were looking at individuals. You smeared an entire faith."

An audibly furious Mr Johnson responded: "Can I tell you what deep offence I take at that? I think you really traduce what I said.

"My view is that Islam is a religion of peace and indeed I am very proud to say I have Muslim ancestors.

"My great-grandfather knew the Koran off by heart, Ken Livingstone, and I really wish you would leave off these kinds of tactics, which demean this race and demean your office."

In an article for The Spectator magazine the week after the bombings, Mr Johnson wrote: "The Islamicists last week horribly and irrefutably asserted the supreme importance of that faith, overriding all worldly considerations... Islam is the problem.

"To any non-Muslim reader of the Koran, Islamophobia - fear of Islam - seems a natural reaction... "

However, he added: "Last week's bombs were placed neither by martyrs nor by soldiers, but by criminals. It was not war, but terrorism, and to say otherwise is a mistake and a surrender."

Lib-Dem candidate Brian Paddick, who was the Met police spokesman after the attacks, said he would have said: " These people cannot bow Londoners."

The rivals also clashed over Mr Livingstone's tearful apology for slavery, which he made on the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the trade last August.

Backing him, Mr Paddick said: "OK, it's nothing to do with us at the moment but there is a serious concern by some people about what has happened in the past. It is right to apologise for what's happened."

However, Mr Johnson said he would not have apologised, adding: "I wouldn't have gone down that route because I think what you're doing is getting into a culture that entrenches and feeds grievances rather than trying to reconcile people."

Mr Livingstone came under pressure from LBC presenter Nick Ferrari to discuss his five children by three different women but insisted: "I have a very good, happy, extended family and we're happy with that arrangement. I'm not going to talk about my private life."

All three candidates said they would still attend the Olympic opening ceremony in Beijing this summer despite Gordon Brown's decision not to do so.

The radio debate came after Mr Johnson was booed and heckled last night at the biggest hustings of the race so far.

The visibly nervous Tory, faced with a hostile audience of 2,500 Londoners, admitted: "This is the most wonderful and intimidating event I've ever been at."

Mr Livingstone also attracted controversy by agreeing to give failed asylum seekers free travel to attend immigration interviews.

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Reader views (21)

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Here's a sample of the latest views published. You can click view all to read all views that readers have sent in.

"Perhaps when politicians finally view Islam as what it really is we will be able to deal with this new brand of Nazism. Thankfully Boris is not ashamed to speak the truth for once."
Simon, Harrow

Good grief. The whole of Islam? All 1.4 billion Muslims are Nazis? You want a London mayor to declare war on Islam? London is 1/7 Muslim what do you propose to do with them? Concentration camps? Expulsion? Denying them the vote/human rights?

How much good do you think this will do to London to have an extremist Mayor of Olympic London 2012?

- Andrew, London, UK

Ken's playing the race/religion card against Boris.
From this we can tell the following:

- he's now categorically petrified of losing;
- he views Boris as an enormous threat;
- he knows he's running out of time;
- he's run out of alternative tactics;
- he knows his contributions to the political debate are useless, and is therefore resorting to personal attacks;
- he knows he's losing favour with Londoners;

The list is endless...
London, please, wake up - on May 1st, vote Boris.

- Joe, London

After the 7/7 bombings, Boris said this:

"Contrast our treatment of the Union Flag, which is endlessly being cited in racial harassment cases, "

Utter nonsense. Not true. Middle- England myth. Boris made extremely unpleasant, racist remarks and he should apologise rather than deny writing those words.

- Dr Susan Porter, London


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