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British Bangladeshi: Labour: Naz Shah [citation needed] Bradford West: 2015: Serving British Pakistani: SNP: Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh [citation needed] Ochil and South Perthshire: 2015: 2017: Defeated British Pakistani/White British/Other White Labour: Tulip Siddiq [citation needed] Hampstead and Kilburn & Hampstead and Highgate: 2015: Serving ...
Wali Tasar Uddin MBE – entrepreneur, restaurateur, community leader, and chairman of the Bangladesh-British Chamber of Commerce [93] [94] Waliur Rahman Bhuiyan OBE – managing director and Country Head of BOC Bangladesh Limited, one of the first British companies to invest in Bangladesh in the 1950s to produce and supply industrial and ...
When Zara Mohammed became the first female leader of one of the largest representative bodies for British Muslims in 2021, she already had a lot on her plate: rising Islamophobia, the Covid-19 ...
The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) is an umbrella body of Muslim organisations in the United Kingdom, with over 500 affiliated mosques and organisations. [1] It was formed in 1994 in response to British government's expressed wish for a single representative body of Muslims it could talk to.
Timothy Winter (Abdal Hakim Murad) was the highest ranked British Muslim, in an unspecified position between 51st and 60th, considerably higher than the three other British people who made the list – the Conservative Party chairman Baroness Sayeeda Warsi; the UK's first Muslim life peer, Lord Nazir Ahmed; and Dr Anas Al Shaikh Ali, director ...
Zara Mohammed (born 2 August 1991) [1] is a Pakistani-Scottish faith leader currently serving as Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain since 2021. [2] She is the first woman to lead the organisation. [3]
The ideas in The Muslim Manifesto: A Strategy for Survival [2] launched the Muslim Parliament. Authored primarily by Kalim Siddiqui, the Manifesto declared: "It is a matter of deep regret that the Government, all political parties and the mass media in Britain are now engaged in a relentless campaign to reduce Muslim citizens of this country to the status of a disparaged and oppressed minority.
On 10 February 2007, the list was announced at a ceremony in the Hilton Hotel on Park Lane in London, after nine months preparation and voting. [1]The list consisted of business leaders, writers, academics, doctors, campaigners, aid agency founders, [1] lords, lawyers, authors, sporting icons, to giants of industry, actors, journalists and police officers.