As with all new reports about legal cases, I take them with a pinch of salt.
Usually British newspapers will utterly bullshit the details so as to best play off the readership. In the case of the Telegraph, Sun and Daily Mail, they have a hard core conservative audience who already openly dislike or condemn islam at any opportunity. So this case will probably be exaggerated just to wind the public up. It sounds like I am bullshitting, but I promise that the papers have been caught out doing this before. The Mail ran the headline "MUSLIM WANTS TAKEAWAY CLOSED FOR SMELLING OF BACON" - it was an utter falsehood - a non-story about a non-muslim family who were complaining about a take-away incorrectly installing an extaction fan, next-door to their residence.
So I probably won't even give this sort of the story the time of day, because there is literally no way of knowing whether this story is true until someone comes along (usually a victim or a witness, or a justice figure) and provides a proper perspective.
Usually British newspapers will utterly bullshit the details so as to best play off the readership. In the case of the Telegraph, Sun and Daily Mail, they have a hard core conservative audience who already openly dislike or condemn islam at any opportunity. So this case will probably be exaggerated just to wind the public up. It sounds like I am bullshitting, but I promise that the papers have been caught out doing this before. The Mail ran the headline "MUSLIM WANTS TAKEAWAY CLOSED FOR SMELLING OF BACON" - it was an utter falsehood - a non-story about a non-muslim family who were complaining about a take-away incorrectly installing an extaction fan, next-door to their residence.
So I probably won't even give this sort of the story the time of day, because there is literally no way of knowing whether this story is true until someone comes along (usually a victim or a witness, or a justice figure) and provides a proper perspective.