Protesters forced their way in to a north London mosque where an MP was meeting constituents after posting violent warning messages online.
Tory MP Mike Freer was forced to pull out of the meeting after being targeted by the Muslims Against Crusades group who had posted messages invoking the Stephen Timms stabbing online.
Today he urged Home Secretary Theresa May to take action against the group after the attack at his North Finchley constituency surgery.
In a chilling message ahead of the incident on the group’s website, they referred to Labour MP Stephen Timms -who was stabbed while holding a surgery in east London last year -warning the attack on him should serve as a ‘piercing reminder’ to politicians that ‘their presence is no longer welcome in any Muslim area’.
The disturbance at North Finchley Mosque on Friday afternoon began after internet messages posted on Facebook and the Muslims Against Crusades website urged supporters to target the Finchley and Golders Green MP, who had played a prominent role in the campaign against Palestinian activist Sheikh Raed Salah’s visit to the UK earlier this year.
Mr Freer said there was a vocal demonstration outside the mosque as he began his surgery, but then a second group of people arrived and forced their way inside.
‘One of them sat at a table where I was dealing with a constituent and was abusive,’ he said.
Mr Freer, a member of Conservative Friends of Israel, said he was called a ‘Jewish homosexual pig’.
He was escorted by staff at the mosque to a locked part of the building until assistance arrived and described the incident as ‘uncomfortable’.
But it was only when he was made aware of the website’s reference to the attack on East Ham MP Mr Timms that he realised the potential danger.
The message also stated that ‘as a member of the Conservative Party’, Mr Freer ‘has the blood of thousands of Muslims on his hands’.
‘Had I seen the website beforehand, I suspect it might have been a bit more worrying,’ the MP said.
As well as the campaign against Mr Salah, Mr Greer also spoke out against the proposed visit to the UK by US pastor Terry Jones, and stressed he will ‘continue to condemn all forms of religious intolerance’.
Mr Freer said he wanted the Home Secretary to closely monitor the actions of Muslims Against Crusades and subject them to the ‘full force of the law’.
He said: ‘The difficulty is with this group is it’s the third incarnation of other groups. Every time it gets banned, it just renames.
‘What I’m saying is the Home Office needs to be continuing to monitor this group and as soon as they overstep the mark then the full force of the law should come down on them.’
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: ‘Officers attended North Finchley Mosque at 4.10pm on Friday after a disturbance by protesters inside the building. There were no arrests.’