Anti-Muslim discrimination in US rose by 9% last year: CAIR report
Worshipers wait for funeral services to start for 15 of the 17 victims that perished in a Bronx apartment fire seven days ago, at the Islamic Cultural Center in the Bronx borough of New York City, Jan. 16, 2022. (Reuters File Photo)


There has been a 9% increase in discrimination against Muslims in the U.S., a report prepared by the top Muslim civil rights and advocacy group in the country said.

Officials from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) held a press conference to release the findings of the report, titled "Still Suspect: The Impact of Structural Islamophobia."

According to the report, CAIR received 6,720 complaints nationwide last year involving a range of issues including immigration, travel discrimination, law enforcement and government overreach, hate and bias incidents, custody rights, school incidents and free speech incidents.

"This represents the highest number of cases reported to CAIR in 27 years. This milestone is alarming," said CAIR's National Executive Director Nihad Awad at the press conference.

Awad noted that the report speaks for itself, adding "Islamophobia is structural and deep in our society."

"Islamophobia has become mainstream in America. It made its way into the government institutions and public sphere through laws, policies, political rhetoric and other manifestations," he added.

In a breakdown, the group received 2,823 immigration and travel-related complaints, 745 workplace discrimination complaints, 553 denials of public accommodation complaints, 679 law enforcement and government overreach complaints, 308 hate and bias incidents related complaints, 278 complaints over incarceration rights, 177 complaints over school incidents, 56 anti-BDS free speech complaints and 1,101 general complaints.

The report found that there was a 55% increase in law enforcement and government overreach complaints in 2021, while there was a 28% increase in hate and bias incidents that included the forcible removal of the hijab, or Muslim headscarf, harassment, vandalism and physical assaults.

Awad believes the U.S. government can be part of the solution to curbing Islamophobia.

"We urge today Congress to adopt legislation making federal funding for local law enforcement agencies contingent on those agencies documenting and reporting hate crimes to the FBI's national database. This would offer an incentive for local law enforcement to take the threat of Islamophobia seriously," he added.