- Source: Mothin Ali
Mothin Ali ( ) is a British Green Party politician and a member of Leeds City Council.
Politics
Following a period supporting the Labour Party, Ali joined the Green Party, and began campaigning for election as the Green Party candidate for the Gipton and Harehills ward of Leeds City Council in 2022; this was one of the UK's poorest areas, 40% of whose population was Muslim, with over 65% coming from minority ethnic groups. He was elected in 2024. This result was interpreted by some commentators as a sign of local voters' dissatisfaction with the Labour Party's stance on the then-ongoing Israel-Hamas war. In 2024, Ali was also nominated to be deputy Mayor of West Yorkshire in the event that the Green Party won the 2024 West Yorkshire mayoral election, but the Green Party was not elected.
As a member of the Greens For Palestine group, Ali supported a change to Green Party policy to label the Israeli government's conduct in the Israel-Hamas war as "apartheid" and "genocide" and to support the associated Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. Ali made a prominent speech promoting this policy at the Green Party's annual conference in September 2024, and the party accepted the proposed policy change.
Ali is an anti-racism campaigner. He started the DigItOut campaign, which aims to end racism in horticulture and gardening. This was a response to his own experiences of racism in the gardening world, including abuse he received on his YouTube channel, which worsened after the publication in 2021 of the findings of the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities. He is a long-standing critic of the UK government's Prevent counter-terrorism strategy, arguing that it embeds Islamophobia. In the wake of the 2024 United Kingdom riots, he criticised the racism of their perpetrators while also criticising what he saw as growing media and government encouragement of racist attitudes, and particularly Islamophobia, in the UK. As of 2024, he was campaigning to make Leeds what he called a "city of belonging", modelled on the concept of a City of Sanctuary.
Shortly after his election, Ali sought to overturn a Leeds City Council policy to close a number of Council-run nurseries.
= Harehills unrest
=During the 2024 Harehills unrest, Ali formed what some press reports called "a human shield" to stop violence escalating and appealed for calm. Ali was erroneously accused of taking part in the unrest by some far-right political commentators, and as of September 2024 was raising money to take legal action against his alleged libellors. The Muslim Council of Britain commended Ali for his "bravery and service" during the unrest. Following the unrest, Ali organised community meetings, particularly developing his contacts with the local Roma community.
= Controversy
=Following his election in May 2024, Ali was criticised by the Leeds Jewish Representative Council after describing his local election victory a "win for the people of Gaza" amidst the Israel–Hamas war. On 7 October during the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, Ali had said that people should "support the right of indigenous people to fight back" and said that "they are not victims, they are occupiers, they are colonialists, they are European colonialists". Ali delivered his victory speech in front of a Palestinian flag instead of a British flag. The Green Party stated that it would investigate Ali's comments and the circumstances surrounding his victory speech. Ali was condemned by the Board of Deputies of British Jews and subsequently apologised for "any upset my comments caused" and said that he does not support violence on either side. In later interviews, he noted that he had experienced extensive harassment following media coverage of the incident, including the puncturing of his car tyres, and 5Pillars reported that he had required police protection.
Ali's controversial Gaza comments were made against the backdrop of another incident in which he slandered a Jewish chaplain, the Rabbi of the Hillel House at the University of Leeds, referring to him as a "creep", a "low-life", and a "kind of animal". Ali suggested that the Rabbi was "going to kill" students at the University of Leeds. This incident was condemned by the Board of Deputies of British Jews, and the Leeds Jewish Representative Council, which stated in an open letter that Ali had "substantial history of views which are concerning to the Jewish community".
Horticulture
Ali has a YouTube channel, "My Family Garden", which in 2022 had 35,000 subscribers and 50,000 in 2024, where he documents his gardening. In 2022, he was featured on the BBC programmes Marcus Wareing's Tales from a Kitchen Garden and Blossom Trees and Burnt Out Cars; in the same year he began craft production of achar made from home-grown ingredients.
Personal life
Ali is of Bangladeshi heritage, his family moving to the UK in the 1960s. He moved to Gipton and Harehills in 2000. As of 2022, he was an accountant by day and Islamic teacher in the evenings.
References
External links
"Councillor details - Councillor Mothin Ali". democracy.leeds.gov.uk. Leeds City Council.
Leeds Green Party personal page
MyFamilyGarden
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Mothin Ali
- 2024 Harehills riot
- Takbir
- Gipton and Harehills (ward)
- Leeds City Council
- 2024 Leeds City Council election
- 2023 Leeds City Council election
- 2022 Leeds City Council election
- 2018 Birmingham City Council election