David Cameron's new hate speech crackdown will see 'extreme' broadcasters blocked
Ian Silvera
David Cameron's Extremism Bill is also said to order a review of Sharia courts in Britain
Reuters/Dan Kitwood/Pool
The UK's broadcasting
watchdog will reportedly be given more powers to gag programmes
believed to include "unacceptable extremist material" as part of a new
crackdown on hate speech.
David Cameron will apparently widen Ofcom's remit and also extend
vetting rules so that employers will be informed of "known extremists"
in a bid to stop them working with children and other vulnerable groups,
The Times reported.
The measures, which also include an independent review of so-called
"Sharia courts" in Britain, will make up an Extremism Bill. The draft
legislation will reportedly be announced by the prime minister on 18 May
and will be included in the Queen's speech.
"Cameron's decision to make counter-extremism a centrepiece of the
Queen's Speech reflects concerns that his 'legacy programme' planned for
the aftermath of the EU referendum was insufficiently ambitious," the
newspaper claimed.
Cameron speaks to Muslim women in Leeds
Getty ImagesA Home Office spokesman declined to comment to IBTimes UK,
while a Number 10 spokeswoman told The Times: "We are not going to
speculate about the content of the Queen's Speech in advance."
The report comes after Cameron unveiled a £20 million ($30m) fund in
January to help teach Muslim women in the UK to speak English.
The programme is designed to tackle segregation and promote community
cohesion, with the government claiming 190,000 Muslim women had little
or no English.
But the announcement was not without controversy as social media users claimed the scheme was patronising.
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