Gendered Islamophobia
Women and Equalities Committee
Open
Inquiry
Opened: 11 Dec 2024
Parliament page
This is a one off session examining issues around gendered Islamophobia. The session aims to understand the specific challenges facing Muslim women in the UK today. The session will examine the difficulties defining and agreeing on a definition of Islamophobia, the barriers women face reporting Islamophobia, and the ways gendered …
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19
Recommendations
13
Conclusions
1
Report
1
Oral session
1
Event
Activity timeline 4 events
12 May
2026
2026
30 Jan
2026
2026
15 Jan
2025
2025
Oral evidence
15 Jan
2025
2025
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · Room 16, Palace of Westminster
Oral evidence sessions 1 session
15 Jan 2025
View on parliament.uk
Women and Equalities Committee
Allia Fredericks · Muslim Girls Fence
Dr Irene Zempi · Nottingham Trent University
Raheel Mohammed · Maslaha
The Baroness Shaista Gohir · Muslim Women's Network UK
Reports 1 report · click to expand
| Title | HC No. | Published | Items | Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10th Report – Discrimination, harassment and abuse against Musli… | HC 571 | 30 Jan 2026 | 32 | Responded |
Recommendations & Conclusions
11 results
9
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Mandate regional mayors to lead awareness and trust-building for anti-Muslim hate reporting services.
Given reforms to the provision of local services, including the proposed abolition of police and crime commissioners, we recommend regional mayors take a lead role in working with community organisations to raise awareness of the reporting service, to build trust …
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Government Response
The government agrees Mayors are well placed to work with community organisations to raise awareness and will write to all UK Mayors encouraging them to promote the reporting service.
Government Equalities Office
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15
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Highlight achievements of Muslim women in key industries to foster role models and encourage employment.
Visible and relatable role models can be a valuable source of inspiration and provide demonstrable evidence that a career choice is accessible yet in many cases such role models are lacking for Muslim women. The Government and major employers should …
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Government Response
The government's Race Equality Unit will host a roundtable with MHCLG and major employers to shine a light on Muslim women inspiring meaningful change in a range of industries, driving up employment and representation.
Government Equalities Office
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19
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Review support for NHS Muslim staff to ensure protection and effective reporting of abuse.
In light of increases in anti-Muslim hate in society, the NHS should review the support available to its Muslim staff and ensure that staff feel protected and able to report abusive and discriminatory behaviours in the knowledge that the necessary …
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Government Response
The government states that NHS already has policies and procedures to protect staff and that the NHS Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Improvement Plan aims to ensure all staff feel safe to speak up and report abusive or discriminatory behaviours.
Government Equalities Office
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20
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Ensure refreshed Women's Health Strategy addresses poor outcomes for Muslim women's healthcare.
Tackling disparities in women’s healthcare is a key focus of the Women’s Health Strategy. The Government is due to refresh the strategy in the coming months. The Government should ensure that addressing poor outcomes faced by Muslim women, including in …
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Government Response
The government will include addressing poor outcomes faced by Muslim women in the provision of mental health support and pain relief for women, is included in that work, in the renewed Women's Health Strategy.
Government Equalities Office
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22
Conclusion
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Government's hate crime action plan remains expired, missing strategic opportunity.
It is disappointing that the Government has not updated the hate crime action plan, which expired in 2020. The lack of an action plan is a missed opportunity to provide a coherent, cross-departmental strategy on tackling intersectional hate crime. (Conclusion, …
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Government Response
The government says it is currently prioritising the implementation of measures outlined in Protecting What Matters, as well as continuing existing programmes to address hate crime and religious hatred.
Government Equalities Office
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24
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Utilise Violence Against Women and Girls Strategy to raise awareness of abuse against Muslim women.
The Government should use work around the Violence Against Women and Girls Strategy to raise awareness of the abuse of Muslim women in this country. It should complement an updated hate crime action plan. (Recommendation, Paragraph 103)
Government Response
The government states it is already raising awareness of abuse through the Protecting What Matters plan, awareness-raising campaigns, the National Centre for VAWG and Public Protection, increased funding for safe accommodation and new measures to prevent and tackle ‘honour’-based abuse.
Government Equalities Office
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25
Conclusion
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Online platforms facilitate religious hatred with inadequate regulation and consequences.
At present people can stir up religious hatred online in the knowledge that their comments are unlikely to be removed and, except in the most extreme cases, are unlikely to face any consequences for their actions. While some individuals have …
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Government Response
The government states that the Online Safety Act (OSA) introduced measures on in-scope platforms to protect users from illegal content, and that traditional publishers are members of regulatory bodies enforcing codes of conduct.
Government Equalities Office
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27
Conclusion
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Ofcom's hateful content investigation scope is too narrow, lacking confidence in consequences.
We welcome Ofcom’s investigation into the adequacy of social media companies’ actions in the removal of hateful content and potential strengthening of the Code of Practice. This work is urgent, yet only one company will be investigated over the next …
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Government Response
The government agrees with the committee, then describes the Online Safety Act and other existing measures aimed at regulating online content and ensuring accountability for platforms.
Government Equalities Office
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28
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Review Ofcom's resources and powers to effectively enforce the Online Safety Act.
In response to the increasing problem of online hate, the Government should review whether Ofcom has the resources and powers it needs to enforce the Online Safety Act effectively. (Recommendation, Paragraph 110)
Government Response
The government states Ofcom's spending cap allows it to deliver its duties under the OSA, and that Ofcom has recruited an expert online safety team and has robust enforcement powers including the power to issue financial penalties.
Government Equalities Office
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31
Conclusion
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Community programmes significantly increase Muslim women's participation in social activity and support mental well-being.
Community programmes such as Muslim Girls Fence are an important means of increasing Muslim women and girls’ participation in social and physical activity and supporting mental health. They allow Muslim women to be their authentic selves without fear of judgement, …
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Government Response
The Government recognises the importance of community-led initiatives and outlines existing programs like the Common Ground Resilience Fund and partnerships with organizations like the Muslim Sports Foundation and This Girl Can campaign to support Muslim women and girls' participation in social activity.
Government Equalities Office
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32
Recommendation
Accepted
10th Report – Discrimination, hara…
Increase government support for grassroots initiatives enabling Muslim women's participation in social activity.
The Government should increase its support for community-led grassroots initiatives aimed at supporting Muslim women and girls to participate in social activity. (Recommendation, Paragraph 118) 54
Government Response
The government says it already supports community-led initiatives through the Common Ground Resilience Fund (CGRF) and other programmes, including the Muslim Sports Foundation and This Girl Can campaign.
Government Equalities Office
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