Sharia law comments In June 2016 on the ABC TV program
The Drum, Abdel-Magied said that
Sharia law "allows for multiple interpretations... it's about mercy, it's about kindness". In February 2017, Abdel-Magied was a panelist on the
Q&A program where she was challenged about her views on Sharia law by politician
Jacqui Lambie. Abdel-Magied said "Islam to me is the most
feminist religion. We got equal rights well before the Europeans. We don't take our husbands' last names because we ain't their property." She said that Sharia law is as simple as "me praying five times a day," and that it says that "you follow the law of the land on which you are on". A right-wing group called "AltCon News" started an
online petition after the show, calling for Abdel-Magied to be sacked from hosting the
ABC TV show
Australia Wide for what they saw as her "pro-Sharia law comments". The petition received more than 15,000 signatures. It is used to remember fallen military personnel as a mark of respect. Abdel-Magied's words in brackets referenced refugees held in detention on
Manus Island and
Nauru, and alleged injustices against
Palestinians. The comment was criticised by many on social media as well as Minister for Immigration
Peter Dutton. Abdel-Magied deleted the part in brackets soon after posting it, commenting: "It was brought to my attention that my last post was disrespectful, and for that, I apologise unreservedly." Australian Muslim leaders expressed varying views on the controversy, from support to denouncing her remarks as not reflective of the views of all Muslims. The following day, Deputy Prime Minister
Barnaby Joyce suggested the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) should take action against Abdel-Magied, and the ABC also became a target of the right-wing media. The ABC argued that Abdel-Magied's personal opinions did not represent those of the national broadcaster.
Consequences On 3 July 2017, Abdel-Magied announced in a
tweet that she was moving to London, "to partake in the Aussie rite of passage". She did not specify her reasons for leaving, but after arriving in London said that it had been "exhausting" to have been the subject of controversy and that she had felt betrayed by her home country, after criticism aimed at her had been "visceral" and "more about who I am than about what is said". An essay originally published by the
Griffith Review in April 2017 was reprinted in
The Guardian on 6 July, along with a short introduction describing the extremity of the behaviours to which she had been subjected. She had been
trolled relentlessly after her Q&A appearance and Anzac Day post, including being sent videos of beheadings and rapes with suggestions that the same should happen to her. She was subjected to daily death threats on social media as well as abusive telephone calls, forcing her to change her phone number, move house and delete social media accounts. She later said that she had become "Australia's most publicly hated Muslim". Other commentators said that she had been the victim of "character assassination",
Islamophobia and her
feminism.
Susan Carland likened the media frenzy after the Q&A incident to a
witch-hunt, saying that
The Australian ran four front pages as well as 26 editorials and opinion pieces, and every major news site in the country had run at least one piece on it. The
Murdoch-owned Newscorp media had been particularly vicious in their attacks. Writer
Randa Abdel-Fattah wrote "Abdel-Magied has come to represent everything that Islamophobia hates – but actually loves – about 'the Muslim problem' ", and that her critics would have preferred her to stay in Australia. In May 2022 in a London interview, Abdel-Magied described how she remained traumatised by the abuse, and that she would not be returning to Australia.
Eponym In April 2019, comedian and writer
Sami Shah presented a series of radio programmes in which he investigated the concept and practice of
free speech in Australia. He reported that his interviewees who were
people of colour all reported experience of or a fear of "getting
Yassmined", and also drew comparison with the
Adam Goodes controversy in 2015. The term has been used in other sources too. ==Post-relocation career (2018–present)==