It is a vitally important case from our point of view to ensure the Muslim community is able to have as much say about ensuring their rights as other groups do.

This is not about a personal choice, but an essential need that must be accommodated if we are to be serious about having religious freedom. By events taking place in the last few years in the West and Britain, Muslims feel ever increasingly as second-class citizens.

We seem to have different standards when we deal with these issues from different communities.

This is creating an environment that can only further alienate the Muslim community.

This is criminalizing freedom of speech, opinion, thought and belief.

The idea that foreign preachers who don't speak English are radicalizing British youth who speak nothing but English is absurd.