The London bombings have prompted the UK government to outlaw Hizb ut Tahrir - a radical Islamic group that wants to replace secular governments with an Islamic Caliphate, or super-state run according to Sharia Law.
The group is particularly strong in Central Asia, where it believes it may take the first steps towards establishing its Caliphate.
High in the mountains of poverty-stricken Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia a bearded man with a fierce gaze slices a watermelon. It is a very colourful sight - red drops of juice on the green carpet, with the glistening snow-covered peaks in the distance.
“In this village, people trust us, not the authorities,” says Nur Mohammed, a local leader of Hizb ut Tahrir, which is also banned in Kyrgyzstan.
“Everybody here knows that we will solve their problems quickly and in strict accordance with the Koran. And this suits people a lot better than the slow, bureaucratic and often expensive official route.”
“We have already won the battles on prostitution, drink and robbery,” says Nur Mohammed.
“All we do is talk to people about the Koran. Sometimes, it requires more than just the skill of persuasion - but in the end, we do come out on top. In our village, nobody even locks their doors now. We’ve taught people to trust each other - and to respect Sharia law.”
But for Hizb ut Tahrir, battles for hearts and minds in small villages like Arslanbob are just routine. The organisation aims much higher.
Dilior is the official spokesman of Hizb ut Tahrir in southern Kyrgyzstan. Even though his group is banned, scores of journalists visit his house every week.
“All Muslims in the world already want to live in a Caliphate, under Sharia law,” he says. “It will be a huge state, a very powerful state. Even now you are all afraid of us - America, Israel, you in the UK too.”
Dilior tried to set up a TV station which would spread this message to all Muslims in Kara-Suu and the neighbouring towns. But after just three days on air, it was shut down by the authorities.
So now he is going to take “the bureaucrats” to court. His proof that the TV station was necessary is hundreds of letters from ordinary people who want to know more about Hizb ut Tahrir’s hardline view of Islam.
“Democracy has not given people anything worthwhile,” explains Dilior. "Look at you: in the UK, you give rights to homosexual couples. Even animals don’t do this. So is this what your democracy has to offer?
“Now, Allah gives an answer to every possible question: how to deal with friends and neighbours, how to bring up children, even how to use the toilet - it’s all in the Koran. Of course, people want to know these answers.”
But despite this radicalism, Hizb ut Tahrir condemns all violence. The group is sure that an Islamic super-state will be created through evolution, not revolution.
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Meanwhile, Hizb ut Tahrir are gaining more and more supporters across Central Asia - people who think that democracy should be written off as ineffective and replaced by the Sharia law.**
So governments in the region are trying to find a way of dealing with this emerging threat.
**The most common option is to get the police involved. But even the harshest of measures seem counterproductive.
The cells below the police station at Osh are dark, damp and grim. Hizb ut Tahrir members detained by Kyrgyzstan’s police are held in filthy cells.
Nur Mohammed, the unofficial leader of Arslanbob’s Muslims, has already spent time in jail. He remembers those days as some of the best in his life.
“If you put a Muslim like me under pressure,” he says, “he quickly understands that Allah is his one and only friend… I myself only became a true believer behind bars.”**
Alhamdulilah they try to ban muslims who call for the islamic state but you cannot ban ideas you cannot fight against a belief the kuffar plan and allah(swt) is the best of planner