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Four men convicted of assaulting man at mosque in Longford

Leading members of the local Muslim community have called for peace after the incident.

LEADING MEMBERS FROM a Muslim community in Longford have spoken of their desire for peace to prevail after four men were convicted of assaulting another man inside a mosque over two years ago.

Muhammad Abid Hussain, Ahsan Rasool, Ghulan Rasool and Mohammad Tariq, all with addresses in Cloverwell, Edgeworthstown, Co Longford have been found guilty of assaulting Muhammad Asim the Longford Community Islamic Centre, Townspark Industrial Estate, Longford on 21 August 2015.

Two other men, Muhammad Khalid and Quasim Rasool, also with addresses in Cloverwell, were cleared of assaulting Asim.

The pair were, however, convicted of committing public order offences on the same date, resulting in €80 fines being handed out to both men respectively.

Speaking outside a special sitting of Longford District Court yesterday evening, Dr Syed Ali, the mosque’s trustee and chairman, said he hoped the ruling would bring closure to the entire episode.

“This mosque belongs to all the members of the community and this is not the mosque of one man,” he said, while defending his own role in the incident.

“I am not a dictator, I am the trustee of the mosque and chairman of the mosque and I hope from now on we will live in harmony.”

Hafeez Rehman, who represented the six men before the court, echoed his sentiments.

“We don’t want to form a new mosque,” he said.

We are a peaceful community. We want peace and reconciliation. We want rules and regulations, to have elections and whoever wins those elections for them to be done the democratic way.

Those statements followed almost three days of evidence heard before Judge John Cheatle.

Removal of imam

During the course of those testimonies, the court heard how the planned removal of an imam sparked a row which was witnessed by up to 200 people.

Investigating officer Garda Michael Belton said charges were brought against the six men after he observed what he termed the “remnants of a row” inside the mosque which left Asim bleeding from the head and with his robe ripped apart.

A number of witnesses inside the mosque on the day took the stand, including the victim. He said he was struck by one of the accused, Abid Hussain after raising objections to the imam’s impending departure.

“He pushed me over the chest and when I said to him: ‘Don’t push me’, he became aggressive and slapped me twice over my face,” Asim said.

The court also heard from the mosque’s former imam, Asif Nafaz. He said he believed a decision taken by the mosque’s committee to relieve him of his duties in the days leading up the incident may have prompted the row.

Defence barrister Niall Flynn, BL, argued that the State’s case contained “numerous inconsistencies” in the evidence provided by prosecution witnesses and those which were contained in statements.

In seeking a dismissal on behalf of his clients, Flynn said Asim had, in fact, been the “author of his own misfortune” by instigating the entire incident.

“[Asim] said in his evidence said eight people assaulted him, but only six men were charged and by the time the prosecution case closed we didn’t know if it was six or 16 people involved,” Flynn said.

Fined

Judge Cheatle rejected many of those claims, including suggestions that because the incident occurred inside a mosque it was not in a public place.

In fining Khalid and Rasool €80 each for being in breach of public order, Judge Cheatle conceded there was insufficient evidence in determining both men assaulted Asim and dismissed the charges against the pair.

Cheatle, meanwhile, ordered their four other co-accused to return to court on 21 November with €500 each in compensation for the victim. In the event all four keep to the terms of that order, the judge indicated he would finalise the case by applying the Probation Act.

If those terms aren’t kept, he said the court would hand down a two-month suspended prison term to each of the men.

Comments are closed due to ongoing legal proceedings.

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