POLL OF THE DAY: Do you agree that traditional Britons can't share their views for fear of harassment? YOUR VERDICT

Sara Khan
British people are experiencing "freedom restricting harassment", the Government’s adviser on social cohesion has warned
PA
Oliver Trapnell

By Oliver Trapnell


Published: 26/03/2024

- 06:00

Updated: 26/03/2024

- 21:31

A review found in some areas there is “no infrastructure in place” to tackle disinformation and harassment

A Government adviser on social cohesion has yesterday warned that British people are experiencing “freedom restricting harassment”

Dame Sara Khan, who authored a report into extremism, warned that rising hate crime could “erode our freedoms”.


The Khan Review warned that towns and cities across Britain are “struggling” to deal with extremism being whipped up by Islamists and the far Right.

It concluded that in some areas there is “no infrastructure in place” to tackle conspiracy theories, disinformation and harassment.

POLL OF THE DAY: Do you agree that traditional Britons can't share their views for fear of harassment? YOUR VERDICT

POLL OF THE DAY: Do you agree that traditional Britons can't share their views for fear of harassment? YOUR VERDICT

GB News

In an exclusive poll for GB News membership readers, an overwhelming majority (77 per cent) of the 834 voters agreed that traditional Britons can't share their views for fear of harassment, while just 22 per cent thought they could. One per cent said they did not know.

Speaking to GB News, Khan explained: “So what I describe in my report to this phenomenon called freedom restricting harassment, which is when people experience or witness threatening, intimidatory or abusive harassment either online or offline, which is then intended to make individuals or institutions self-censor out of fear.

“And so what our polling shows is that around three-quarters of the British public feel that they cannot share their personal opinion public out of fear of receiving freedom, restricting harassment.

“And you'll be aware that there's been a lot of debate over the last couple of months, even years, about how parliamentarians and those in public life have been at the forefront of such abuse and harassment.

“What my report shows for the first time is that this is a much broader phenomenon where people such as academics and teachers, councillors, journalists, civic society activists, people working in the arts and cultural sector are experiencing this awful kind of freedom restricting harassment, which is not only stifling individual liberty, but it's undermining social cohesion and eroding democratic rights and freedoms in our society.”

Sara KhanDame Sara Khan, who authored a report into extremism, warned that rising hate crime could "erode our freedoms"PA

She added: “I spoke to a former leader of a council, for example, who told me that she has received thousands of death threats directly to her, but also on online forums where people said that they would gang rape and traffic her two-year-old daughter.

“She makes her two-year-old daughter sleep by a fireproof blanket because a previous councillor had her property firebombed. I mean, that is just one out of many examples I heard.

“I heard about a civic society organisation, a director of an NGO, of a civic society organisation who regularly receives death threats because of her work to counter hate crime and how her staff have left their work and jobs because of fear of their lives.

“She has to change her route to work every day because she fears being attacked.

“I had constant examples like this and again across the board from different professions, and it's really deeply concerning.

“It's something we have to do because I worry is going to erode our freedoms.”

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