Yes, one of the greatest dilemmas I've found in Luton is balancing honest reporting with maintaining access. It really hampers research.
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Replying to @G_S_Bhogal
I've actually found the UK Salafi community relatively open to 'honest reporting' once they trust the researcher. But that would be much
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Replying to @Anabel_Inge @G_S_Bhogal
harder to do after the documentary. However true the statements filmed on their own terms, the unethical methods - inc filming in homes
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Replying to @Anabel_Inge @G_S_Bhogal
sinister background music, editing, accompanying comments all painted a v distorted and one-dimensional picture of the community.
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Replying to @Anabel_Inge @G_S_Bhogal
As I've written in my book: 'While undercover investigations of other Muslim groups have raised some important issues, they have also
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Replying to @Anabel_Inge @G_S_Bhogal
reduced opportunities for others to engage in transparent research that depends on honesty and mutual trust.'
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Replying to @Anabel_Inge @G_S_Bhogal2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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I still wonder if I had ever sat next to the undercover researcher, who was in full niqab/jilbab. Was same time I was hanging around there!
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Replying to @Anabel_Inge @DrMarranci
Last month I spoke to Farasat Latif of LIC. He told me he regularly gets MI5/SB agents disguised as jihadis!
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Apparently easy to spot because they come from out of town, and straight after introducing themselves they start talking about jihad (!)
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Examples include Morten Storm, Mhmd Q Khan. More than likely you were not only sitting beside docu makers, but also intelligence officers.
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