Some Muslims have been victims of violence because of their religion. In 2005,
The Guardian commissioned an
ICM poll which indicated an increase in anti-Muslim incidents, particularly after the
London bombings in July 2005. Another survey of Muslims, this by the
Open Society Institute, found that of those polled 32% believed they had suffered religious discrimination at airports, and 80% said they had experienced Islamophobia. In January 2010, a report by the
University of Exeter's European Muslim research centre noted that the number of anti-Muslim
hate crimes has increased, ranging from "death threats and murder to persistent low-level assaults, such as spitting and name-calling," for which the media and politicians have been blamed with fueling anti-Muslim hatred. The Islamophobic incidents it described include: "Neil Lewington, a violent extremist nationalist convicted in July 2009 of a bomb plot; Terrance Gavan, a violent extremist nationalist convicted in January 2010 of manufacturing nail bombs and other explosives, firearms and weapons; a gang attack in November 2009 on Muslim students at
City University; the murder in September 2009 of Muslim pensioner, Ikram Syed ul-Haq; a serious assault in August 2007 on the
Imam at
London Central Mosque; and an arson attack in June 2009 on Greenwich Islamic Centre." Other Islamophobic incidents mentioned in the report include "Yasir, a young Moroccan," being "nearly killed while waiting to take a bus from
Willesden to
Regent's Park in London" and "left in a coma for three months"; "Mohammed Kohelee," a "caretaker who suffered burns to his body while trying to prevent an arson attack against Greenwich Mosque"; "the murder" of "
Tooting pensioner Ekram Haque" who "was brutally beaten to death in front of his three year old granddaughter" by a "race-hate" gang; and "police officers" being injured "during an
English Defence League (EDL) march in
Stoke." On 26 August 2007, fans of the English football club
Newcastle United directed anti-Muslim chants at Egyptian
Middlesbrough F.C. striker
Mido. An
FA investigation was launched. He revealed his anger at The FA's investigation, believing that they would make no difference to any future abuse. Two men were eventually arrested over the chanting and were due to appear at Teesside Magistrates Court. A 2013 report by Professor Nigel Copsey of
Teesside University, concluded that between 40% and 60% of mosques and other Islamic centers in the UK had suffered vandalism or arson. In the week following the
London Bridge attack in June 2017, anti-Muslim hate crimes increased fivefold. It was the largest increase in hate crimes against Muslims in the country since the similar backlash following the 2013
Murder of Lee Rigby. Acid attacks against Muslims such as the
2017 Beckton acid attack have also risen. Days after the London Bridge attack, a man named Darren Osborne
intentionally rammed a van into Muslims coming out of a mosque in London, killing one and leaving 10 people injured. In August 2017,
West Yorkshire Police launched a hate crime investigation after letters threatening acid attacks on Muslims were posted in Bradford. The police said the threats were "extremely seriously" increased patrols in Hanover Square, a mainly Muslim inner-city area where at least two residents received the letters last week. The literature shows an image of a sword and the
Saint George's Flag with the words: "Kill scum Muslims." An October 2017
Press Association investigation found that hate crimes targeting mosques and other Muslim places of worship across the UK more than doubled between 2016 and 2017. The same month, during Hate Crime Awareness Week, Associate Professor of Criminology at Birmingham City University Imran Awan and Lecturer in Criminology at Nottingham Trent University Irene Zempi presented research at the House of Commons showing that some non-Muslim men suffered verbal, physical and emotional abuse because they looked Muslim. In April 2018, letters were sent to people in
East London calling for a "Punish a Muslim Day", with a points system to award people for acts of hatred toward Muslims. Police said there was no credible evidence of a planned attack, and in June of the same year a man from
Lincoln was arrested and charged with fourteen criminal offences in connection with the hate mail campaign. At his trial at the
Old Bailey in October 2018 he pleaded guilty to fifteen charges relating to the "Punish a Muslim Day" letters and other correspondences sent to individuals, public figures and organisations. A 2023 survey by ITV News and an anti-Muslim monitoring group found that almost 90% of mosques across the UK have experienced acts of hate crime in the last year and that Islamophobic hate crimes had increased by five times in the last decade. On 4 October 2025,
two people were filmed setting fire to a mosque in Peacehaven, East Sussex. Two suspects arrested in connection with the attack were later charged with arson with intent to endanger life.
2024 riots Following the
mass stabbing attack against women and girls in
Southport on 29 July 2024, false rumours circulated on social media that the attacker was a Muslim
asylum seeker. The day after the stabbings, a large crowd gathered outside Southport mosque, chanting slogans relating to anti-Islamic campaigner Tommy Robinson. Protestors then attacked the police and disturbances continued for several hours. Following these events, riots, protests and counter-protests occurred around the country for several days. Assaults against Muslims and people of colour also occurred. == Organisations ==