List of British Muslims
This is an incomplete list of notable British Muslims.
Academia and education
- Ali Ansari – university professor at the University of St Andrews[1]
- Abbas Edalat – university professor at Imperial College London[2]
- Ali Mobasheri – associate professor and reader at the University of Nottingham[3]
- Ash Amin – Head of Geography at Cambridge University[4]
- Tipu Zahed Aziz – professor of neurosurgery at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford; lecturer at Magdalen College, Oxford and Imperial College London medical school[5]
- Azra Meadows OBE – honorary lecturer in the Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences at The University of Glasgow[6]
- Dilwar Hussain – research fellow at The Islamic Foundation in Leicester; co-authored the 2004 book British Muslims Between Assimilation and Segregation; is on the Home Office's committee tackling radicalisation and extremism[7]
- Ehsan Masood – science writer, journalist and broadcaster; editor of Research Fortnight and Research Europe;[8] teaches International Science Policy at Imperial College London[9]
- Haroon Ahmed – Emeritus Professor of Microelectronics at the Cavendish Laboratory, the Physics Department of the University of Cambridge[10]
- Ghayasuddin Siddiqui – academic and political activist[11]
- Ghulam Sarwar – Director of the Muslim Educational Trust;[12] internationally recognised writer on Islam in English, especially for writing and publishing the first English textbook, Islam: Beliefs and Teachings, for madrasah students in Britain, which is used worldwide in religious education classes, especially in British schools[13]
- Jawed Siddiqi – professor emeritus of software engineering at Sheffield Hallam University and political activist[14]
- Kalbe Razi Naqvi – British Pakistani physicist, who has been ordinarily resident in Norway since 1977, working as a professor of biophysics in the Norwegian University of Science and Technology[15]
- Mohammed Ghanbari – professor at the University of Essex[16]
- Mohammad Hashem Pesaran – academic, economist, professor of economics at Cambridge University, fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge[17]
- Mohsin Zulfiqar – former professor of chemistry at Habib Institute of Technology; co-ordinates the Aimhigher initiative in Leeds, the second largest education authority in England
- Mona Siddiqui – University of Edinburgh's Professor of Islamic Studies and Public Understanding; regular contributor to BBC Radio 4, The Times, Scotsman, The Guardian, and The Herald[18]
- Reza Banakar – professor of socio-legal studies at the University of Westminster, London
- Saeed Vaseghi – professor at Brunel University[19]
- Sara Ahmed – Professor of Race and Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths[20] and academic working at the intersection of feminist theory, queer theory, critical race theory and postcolonialism
- Sufiah Yusof – half-Pakistani half-Malaysian mathematics prodigy notable for gaining entry into St Hilda's College, Oxford to study mathematics at age 13[21][22]
- Tariq Modood – Professor of Sociology, Politics and Public Policy at the University of Bristol
- Tufyal Choudhury – lecturer in international human rights law at Durham University[23]
- Ziauddin Sardar – scholar, writer and cultural critic[24]
- Iftikhar H. Malik – scholar, author, professor[25]
Business and finance
- Abdul Latif – restaurateur known for his dish "Curry Hell"[26]
- Afzal Kahn – Bradford-based entrepreneur; owns a specialist car design company; broke records in 2008 for paying £440,000 for a distinctive "F1" number plate;[27] previously showed an interest in purchasing Newcastle football club[28]
- Aktar Islam – restaurateur, curry chef and businessman;[29] in 2010, his restaurant Lasan won the Best Local Restaurant category on Channel 4's The F Word;[30] in 2011, Islam won the Central regional heat to reach the final of the BBC Two series Great British Menu[31][32]
- Ali Parsa – former chief executive officer of private healthcare partnership Circle[33]
- Alireza Sagharchi – principal at Stanhope Gate Architecture[34]
- Aneel Mussarat – property millionaire; his company, MCR Property Group, rents apartments to university students in Manchester and Liverpool[35]
- Sir Anwar Pervez – Pakistan-born businessman; 6th richest Asian in Great Britain and the richest Muslim; founder of the Bestway Group[36]
- Asim Siddiqui – chairman and a founding trustee of The City Circle[37]
- Atique Choudhury – restaurateur;[38] his restaurant Yum Yum won Best Thai Restaurant in London at the 2012 Asian Curry Awards[39]
- Bajloor Rashid MBE – businessman and former president of the Bangladesh Caterers Association[40][41]
- Enam Ali MBE – restaurateur; founder of the British Curry Awards and Spice Business Magazine[42]
- Farad Azima – industrialist, inventor and philanthropist[43]
- Farhad Moshiri – energy investor; part owner of Arsenal F.C.[44]
- Farshid Moussavi – founder of Foreign Office Architects[45]
- Gulam Noon, Baron Noon – founder of Noon products, manufacturing chilled and frozen ready meals[46]
- Husna Ahmad – Bangladeshi-born British humanitarian; chief executive officer of the Faith Regen Foundation; sits on the Advisory Board to the East London Mosque;[47][48] previously sat on the Department for Work and Pensions' Ethnic Minority Advisory Group[49]
- Iqbal Ahmed OBE – entrepreneur, chairman and chief executive of Seamark Group'; made his fortune in shrimp; the highest British Bangladeshi to feature on the Sunday Times Rich List (placed at number 511 in 2006)[50]
- Iqbal Wahhab OBE – entrepreneur, restaurateur, journalist, publisher; founder of Tandoori Magazine and multi-award winning restaurant Cinnamon Club[51]
- James Caan – businessman and entrepreneur; formerly a part of Dragons' Den [52]
- Javed Ahmed – chief executive of Tate & Lyle plc,[53] – a FTSE 250 company which is one of Britain's oldest brands;[54] Lyle's sugar and golden syrup is a familiar sight in British family kitchens
- Kaveh Alamouti – head of Global Macro Citadel LLC; chief executive officer of Citadel Asset Management Europe[55]
- Mahmoud Khayami, KSS – industrialist; founder of Iran Khodro[56]
- Mo Chaudry – born in Pakistan, he was raised in England and went on to become a millionaire businessman in the West Midlands
- Mohammad Ajman 'Tommy Miah' – internationally renowned celebrity chef, award-winning restaurateur,[57][58] founder and promoter of the Indian Chef of the Year Competition[59]
- Moorad Choudhry – managing director, Head of Business Treasury, Global Banking & Markets at Royal Bank of Scotland plc[60]
- Mumtaz Khan Akbar – founder and owner of the Mumtaz brand[61]
- Muquim Ahmed – entrepreneur; became the first Bangladeshi millionaire at the age of 26,[62] due to diversification in banking, travel, a chain of restaurants with the Cafe Naz group, publishing and property development[63]
- Naguib Kheraj – vice-chairman of Barclays Bank;[64] former boss of JP Morgan Cazenove[65] His philanthropic interests have also made him Chairman of the Aga Khan Foundation based in Karachi
- Nasser Golzari – principal at Golzari (NG) Architects[66]
- Leepu Nizamuddin Awlia – car engineer and coachbuilder who converts rusty old cars into imitation supercars in a workshop on Discovery Channel reality television programme Bangla Bangers/Chop Shop: London Garage[67]
- Ragib Ali – industrialist, pioneer tea-planter, educationalist, philanthropist, and banker[68]
- Ruzwana Bashir – British businesswoman, founder and CEO of Peek.com, travel company based in San Francisco, California[69]
- Shelim Hussain MBE – entrepreneur, founder and managing director ofEuro Foods (UK) Limited[70]
- Siraj Ali – restaurateur and philanthropist;[71] recipient of the 2011 British Bangladeshi Who's Who "Outstanding Contribution" Award for his long standing contribution to the hospitality and catering industry[72]
- Sultan Choudhury – businessman; managing director of the Islamic Bank of Britain[73]
- Syed Ahmed – entrepreneur, businessman, and television personality; candidate on BBC reality television programme The Apprentice series two in 2006[74]
- Tahir Mohsan – founder of Time Computers, Supanet, Tpad; manages several investment companies from his base in Dubai[75]
- Wali Tasar Uddin MBE – entrepreneur, restaurateur, community leader, and chairman of the Bangladesh-British Chamber of Commerce[76][77]
- Waliur Rahman Bhuiyan OBE – managing director and Country Head of BOC Bangladesh Limited, one of the first British companies to invest in Bangladesh in the 1950s to produce and supply industrial and medical gases[78]
- Zameer Choudrey – Chief Executive of Bestway Group[79]
- Zuber Mohsan – managing director of Supanet.com, the fifth largest ISP in the UK
Entertainment
- Adil Ray – presenter; creator of BBC South Asian Muslim comedy Citizen Khan, in which he also portrays the protagonist
- Adnan Sami – singer, musician, pianist,[80][81] actor and composer[82][83]
- Afshan Azad – actress best known for playing the role of Padma Patil in the Harry Potter film series[84]
- Ahmad Hussain – singer-songwriter, executive, producer and founder and Managing Director of IQRA Promotions[85][85]
- Ahsan Khan – film and television actor, host and performer[86]
- Ahmed Salim – award-winning British producer, known for 1001 Inventions[87]
- Akram Khan MBE – dancer and choreographer;[88] named Outstanding Newcomer 2000, Best Modern Choreography 2002, and Outstanding Male or Female Artist (Modern) 2005 at the Critics' Circle National Dance Awards[89]
- Alyy Khan – film and television actor and host[90]
- Ali Shahalom – comedian who hosts his the comedy YouTube channel Aliofficial1[91]
- Anwar Kharral – fictional British Pakistani character in the teenage television series Skins;[92] portrayed by Dev Patel, who is of Gujarati descent
- Aqib Khan – actor; played Sajid Khan in the movie West is West[93]
- Art Malik – Pakistani-born British actor who achieved international fame in the 1980s through his starring and subsidiary roles in assorted British and Merchant-Ivory television serials and films[94]
- Ayub Khan-Din – actor and playwright
- Aziz Ibrahim – musician best known for his work as guitarist with Simply Red, The Stone Roses (post-John Squire)[95]
- Babar Ahmed – British/American writer/director of Pashtun and Pakistani descent; according to the BBC[96] he is one of the most prominent South Asian film directors in America
- Babar Bhatti – actor; played Punkah Wallah Rumzan in the BBC sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum, his first role[97]
- Badi Uzzaman – television and film actor[98]
- Bilal Shahid – singer and rapper[99]
- Boyan Uddin Chowdhury – former lead guitarist of rock band The Zutons[100]
- Delwar Hussain – writer, anthropologist and correspondent for The Guardian; in 2013, published his first book, Boundaries Undermined: The Ruins of Progress on the Bangladesh-India Border[101]
- Dino Shafeek – actor and comedian who starred in several sitcoms during the 1970s and early 80s; played Char Wallah Muhammed in It Ain't Half Hot Mum and Ali Nadim in Mind Your Language[102]
- Eenasul Fateh (Aladin) – cultural practitioner, magician and live artist; named International Magician of the Year in 1991; winner of the 1997 Golden Turban Award from the Magic Academy of Bangalore in India[103]
- Hannan Majid – documentary filmmaker whose films have been exhibited at international film festivals including Emirates, Cambridge, Durban, and Leeds[104]
- Farook Shamsher – alternative dub/dance music DJ and record producer; received the Commitment to Scene award at the UK Asian Music Awards 2006[105]
- Hadi Khorsandi – comedian[106]
- Hajaz Akram – British Pakistani actor[107]
- Humza Arshad – actor and comedian; producer of the YouTube series Diary of a Badman[108][109][110]
- Ian Iqbal Rashid – award-winning poet, screenwriter and film director, known for the series This Life and Leaving Normal, and the feature films Touch of Pink and How She Move
- Idris Rahman – clarinettist
- Imran Sarwar – game designer and producer on the Grand Theft Auto series of video games[111]
- Jan Uddin – actor best known for his roles as Jalil Iqbal in BBC soap opera EastEnders and Sweet Boy in the film Shank[112]
- Jeff Mirza – stand-up comedian and actor[113]
- Jernade Miah – singer, songwriter; signed to 2Point9 Records (Doh Point Nau); won Best Newcomer at the UK Asian Music Awards 2011[114][115]
- Kamal Uddin – Nasheed singer, songwriter,[116] imam, and teacher[117]
- Kaniz Ali – makeup artist and freelance beauty columnist;[118] named Best Make-Up Artist at the 2011International Asian Fashion Awards[119]
- Kayvan Novak – actor; star of Fonejacker[120]
- Kishon Khan – pianist and bandleader of Lokkhi Terra
- Katrina Kaif – Model, Film-actress
- Lucy Rahman – singer[121]
- Mani Liaqat – Manchester-based British Asian actor and comedian, known for his bizarre rants, portly figure, witty voice and mixture of Punjabi/Urdu/Hindi and British everyday-humour[122]
- Munsur Ali – film producer, screenwriter and director; in 2014, he wrote, directed and produced Shongram, a romantic drama set during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War;[123] this was the first time a British film was simultaneously written, produced and directed by a British Bangladeshi[124]
- Mazhar Munir – television and film actor; before co-starring in the 2005 movie Syriana, he appeared in three British television shows: The Bill, Mile High, and Doctors
- Menhaj Huda – film and television director, producer and screenwriter; directed and produced Kidulthood in 2006[125]
- Mina Anwar – British actress; played Police Constable Maggie Habib in the sitcom The Thin Blue Line[126]
- Mo Ali – Somali-British film director[127]
- Mohammed Ali – street artist; combinedstreet art with Islamic script and patterns, as "Aerosol Arabic";[128][129] in January 2009, he won Arts Council England's diversity award[130]
- Muhammad Mumith Ahmed (Mumzy Stranger) – R&B and hip-hop singer, songwriter; first musician of Bangladeshi descent to release a single, "One More Dance";[131] namedBest Urban Act at the UK Asian Music Awards 2011[132]
- Murtz – television and radio presenter
- Nabil Abdul Rashid – comedian of Nigerian descent
- Nadine Shah – singer, songwriter and musician[133]
- Natasha Khan – known by her stage name as "Bat for Lashes"; half Pakistani half English singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist
- Naz Ikramullah – British-Canadian artist and film producer of Pakistani origin[134]
- Nazeel Azami – Nasheed singer-songwriter signed to Awakening Records[135]
- Nazrin Choudhury – screenwriter; actress in drama serials;[136] her critically acclaimed radio play "Mixed Blood"[137] won the Richard Imison Award 2006
- Prince Abdi – Somali-born British stand-up comedian
- Rani Taj – dhol player dubbed as "Dhol Queen" after her YouTube video went viral[138]
- Rita Ora – singer
- Riz Ahmed – actor who played Omar in the movie Four Lions and Changez in The Reluctant Fundamentalist
- Rowshanara Moni – singer and actress[139]
- Ruhul Amin – film director; has made 13 films for the BBC and Channel 4 including 1986 TV feature film drama A Kind of English;[140] most of his works are documentaries and experimental dramas[141]
- Runa Islam – film and photography visual artist, nominated for the Turner Prize 2008[142][143]
- Sadia Azmat – stand-up comedian[144]
- Sanchita Islam – artist, writer and filmmaker;[145] in 1999, she founded Pigment Explosion, which has branched out into projects including film, painting, drawing, writing and photography[146]
- Sadik Ahmed – film director, cinematographer, and writer;[147] wrote and directed international award-winning short film Tanju Miah, which was the first Bangladeshi film in the Toronto, Sundance, and Amsterdam film festivals in 2007[148]
- Saifullah 'Sam' Zaman – DJ and producer associated with the Asian Underground movement, recording as "State of Bengal"[149]
- Sakina Samo – award-winning actress, producer and director[150]
- Sajid Varda – producer, broadcaster, lead actor on TV and film, most notably in Byker Grove and award-winning comedy The Chop
- Sami Yusuf – musician[151]
- Sanober Hussain – British Pakistani; became the first UK Miss Pakistan World 2011
- Shabana Bakhsh – actress who has appeared in soaps such as River City and Doctors[152]
- Shahid Khan – known as "Naughty Boy"; British-born Pakistani songwriter, record producer and musician[153]
- Shahin Badar – singer and songwriter, best known for vocals on The Prodigy's single "Smack My Bitch Up", which earned her a Double Platinum award[154]
- Shefali Chowdhury – actress best known for playing the role of Parvati Patil in the Harry Potter film series[155]
- Shazia Mirza – comedian from Birmingham, England, whose act revolves around her Muslim faith[156]
- Shehzad Afzal – writer, director, producer and game designer born in Dundee, Scotland[157]
- Sohini Alam – singer for Lokkhi Terra and Khiyo bands
- Sophiya Haque – actress, singer and video jockey;[158][159] played Poppy Morales in Coronation Street, 2008-2009[160][161]
- Suleman Mirza – lead dancer of Signature, runner-up on Britain's Got Talent 2008[162]
- Suzana Ansar – singer, actress and television presenter based in the UK and Bangladesh; released her debut band album Suzana Ansar with Khansar in 2009[163]
- Yusuf Islam[164]
- Zahra Ahmadi – actress
- Zayn Malik – former member of the British-Irish boy band One Direction[165] and is from Bradford[166]
- Zeekay – singer, songwriter and performer of Pakistani and Afghan descent
Journalism and media
- Sheikh Abdul Qayum – one of the best known scholars of Great Britain;[167] and chief imam of the East London Mosque; former lecturer at the international International Islamic University Malaysia; television presenter on Peace TV Bangla and Channel S[168]
- Sheikh Abdur Rahman Madani Shaheb – writer, khatib of Darul Ummah Mosque, Islamic scholar and TV presenter on Islamic programs on Channel S[169][170]
- Sheikh Abu Sayed Ansarey – Chairman and Imam of West London Mosque; television presenter on Channel S; lawyer[171][172]
- A. N. M. Serajur Rahman – journalist, broadcaster, and Bangladeshi nationalist[173]
- Aasmah Mir – BBC presenter and former columnist for the Sunday Herald[174]
- Abdul Gaffar Choudhury – writer, journalist, and columnist for Bengali newspapers of Bangladesh; best known for his lyric "Amar Bhaier Rokte Rangano", which has become the main song commemorating the Language Movement
- Adil Ray – British radio and television presenter, for BBC Asian Network[175]
- Adnan Nawaz – news and sports presenter for the BBC World Service[176]
- Ajmal Masroor – television presenter, politician, imam,[177] and UK Parliamentary candidate for Bethnal Green and Bow constituency representing Liberal Democrats in the 2010 general election;[178] television presenter on political and Islamic programmes on Islam Channel and Channel S[179]
- Ali Abbasi – former Scottish TV presenter[180]
- Anila Baig – columnist at The Sun[181]
- Arif Ali – regional product director for the Associated Press news agency in Europe, Middle East and Africa[182]
- Asad Ahmad – BBC journalist and news presenter[183]
- Asad Qureshi – filmmaker who was kidnapped on 26 March 2010 by a militant group called the "Asian Tigers" in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas[184]
- Azad Ali – IT worker and civil servant for the HM Treasury; Islamic Forum of Europe spokesman; founding chair of the Muslim Safety Forum; vice-chair of Unite Against Fascism[185]
- Azeem Rafiq – English cricketer[186]
- Faisal Islam – economics editor and correspondent for Channel 4 News; named 2006 "Young Journalist of the Year" at the Royal Society of Television awards[187]
- Fareena Alam – editor of British Muslim magazine Q News;[188] named Media Professional of the Year by Islamic Relief in 2005 and at the Asian Women of Achievement Awards in 2006[189]
- Faris Kermani – film director based in the UK, now head of production company based in London, Crescent Films[190]
- Hassan Ghani – Scottish[191][192] broadcast journalist and documentary filmmaker, based in London
- Javed Malik – television anchor; publisher of the UAE's first diplomatic magazine, The International Diplomat; Executive Director of the World Forum; served as Pakistan's Ambassador at Large and Special Advisor to The Prime Minister; close friend of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan
- Kamran Abbasi – doctor, medical editor, and cricket writer; editor of the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine; acting editor of the British Medical Journal; editor of the bulletin of the World Health Organization[193]
- Kanak 'Konnie' Huq – television presenter, best known for being the longest-serving female Blue Peter presenter[194][195]
- Lisa Aziz – news presenter and journalist, best known as the co-presenter of the Bristol-based ITV West Country nightly weekday news programme The West Country Tonight;[196] one of the first Asian presenters to be seen on television;[197] won the Ethnic Multicultural Media Academy Best Television News Journalist Award[198][199]
- Mary Rahman – press and public relations consultant; director of MRPR[200]
- Maryam Moshiri – BBC News presenter[201]
- Mazher Mahmood (also known as the "Fake Sheikh") – often dubbed as "Britain's most notorious undercover reporter"; in a GQ survey was voted as the 45th most powerful man in Britain, ahead of Prince William;[202] the News of the World paid his six-figure salary, plus an editorial and technical support budget which included a dedicated technical support crew, his two bodyguards and essential props, including luxury hotel suites, limousines and private jets[203]
- Mehdi Hasan – senior politics editor at the New Statesman and a former news and current affairs editor at Channel 4[204]
- Mishal Husain – anchor for BBC World[205]
- Muhammad Abdul Bari – Chairman of the East London Mosque; Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain, 2006-2010
- Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed – environment writer for The Guardian,[206] where he tracks the geopolitics of environmental, energy and economic crises via his Guardian-hosted blog, Earth Insight[207]
- Nazenin Ansari – journalist, former correspondent for Voice of America's Persian News Netowrk; Iranian analyst for BBC Radio 4, CNN International, Sky News and Aljazeera
- Nazia Mogra – television journalist for BBC North West Tonight news on BBC One[208]
- Nima Nourizadeh – film director
- Nina Hossain – journalist, newscaster, and sole presenter of ITV London's regional news programme London Tonight[209]
- Nurul Islam – broadcast journalist, radio producer, and presenter best remembered for his work with the BBC World Service[210]
- Osama Saeed – Head of International and Media Relations at the Al Jazeera Media Network[211]
- Rageh Omaar – Somali-born British journalist and writer
- Reham Khan – journalist and anchor currently working at Dawn News[212]
- Riz Lateef – news reader and the BBC Deputy News Manager[213]
- Rizwan Khan – works for Al Jazeera English; has his own show called Riz Khan
- Sadeq Saba – journalist, head of BBC Persian service[214]
- Saima Mohsin – British journalist[215]
- Saira Khan – runner-up on the first series of The Apprentice, and now a TV presenter on BBC's Temper Your Temper and Desi DNA[216]
- Sarfraz Manzoor – British writer, journalist, documentary maker, and broadcaster; writes regularly for The Guardian; presents documentaries on BBC Radio 4[217]
- Shaista Aziz – journalist, writer, stand-up comedian, and former international aid worker[218]
- Shagufta Yaqub – journalist and commentator
- Shamim Chowdhury – television and print journalist for Al Jazeera English[219]
- Shereen Nanjiani – radio journalist with BBC Radio Scotland[220]
- Syed Neaz Ahmad – academic, writer, journalist, columnist and critic; best known for anchoring NTV Europe current affairs talk show Talking Point[221]
- Tasmin Lucia-Khan – journalist, presenter and producer;[222] delivered BBC Three's nightly hourly World News bulletins on in 60 Seconds;[223] presented E24 on the rolling news channel BBC News;[224] delivers news bulletins and breaking stories on the ITV breakfast television programme Daybreak[225]
- Tazeen Ahmad – British television and radio presenter and reporter[226]
- Waheed Khan – documentary television director working in British television[227]
- Yasmin Alibhai-Brown – journalist and author born in Uganda; regular columnist for The Independent and the Evening Standard[228]
- Yvonne Ridley – journalist and Respect Party activist[229]
- Zarqa Nawaz – freelance writer, journalist, broadcaster, and filmmaker[230]
Law and justice
- Aamer Anwar – Glaswegian solicitor; named as Criminal Lawyer of the Year by the Law Awards of Scotland in 2005 and 2006[231]
- Amal Clooney – London-based Lebanese-British lawyer, activist, and author[232]
- Khatun Sapnara – barrister and part-time judge; in 2003, became the first ethnic person to be elected to the Family Law Bar Association Committee; appointed to the Family Justice Council in 2004;[233] assisted in formulating and drafting the Forced Marriage (Civil Protection) Act 2007;[234] in 2006, she was appointed as a Recorder of the Crown, which made her the only person of Bangladeshi origin in a senior judicial position
- M. A. Muid Khan – barrister who was selected as the Best Human Rights Lawyer of England and Wales for 2012 by the Chartered Institute of Legal Executives; in September 2012, he was ranked as third in the top five Chartered Legal Executive Lawyers of England and Wales by the Law Society[235]
- Maya Ali – solicitor and Labour Party councillor in Westwood[236]
- Mirza Ahmad – attorney at St. Philips Chambers in Birmingham[237] and Chancery House Chambers in Leeds;[238] managing director of a private consultancy practice, MA (Law & Governance) Limited[239]
- Mumtaz Hussain – solicitor and radio presenter; since 2010, she has presented Health and Healing with Mumtaz on RedShift Radio[240]
- Nazir Afzal – Chief Crown Prosecutor for North West England;[241] one of his first decisions in that role was to initiate prosecutions in the case of the Rochdale sex trafficking gang
- Sadiq Khan – current mayor of London,senior member of the Labour Party; former Chair of the Fabian Society think tank; serving as the Shadow Lord Chancellor[242]
- Tahir Ashraf is a Barrister in England and Wales and Solicitor-Advocate and Founder of 5 Chancery Lane Commercial Barristers Chambers. Tahir Ashraf is also the first British Muslim man to be an Editorial Board Member of the Journal of International Banking and Financial Law a LexisNexis publication. Tahir Ashraf is also the first British Muslim man of Pakistani descent to have established a set of barristers chambers in London, United Kingdom uniquely dedicated the finest British legal minds and to business and commercial law. Known also as Barrister Tahir Ashraf, in Pakistan he has won 4 British legal awards in 2016, namely the Finance Monthly Global Awards 2016; ACQ5 Global Awards 2016; International Advisory Experts 2016 Awards Winner and the Lawyer Monthly Legal Awards 2016. Tahir Ashraf is a member of the Bar Association of Commerce finance and Industry (BACFI); the Chancery Bar Association; the Commercial Bar Association and the London Common Law and Commercial Bar Association.
Literature and art
- Abdur Rouf Choudhury – Bengali diaspora writer and philosopher; has received numerous literary awards from Bangladesh including the Granthomela award and life membership from Bangla Academy[243]
- Eenasul Fateh (Aladin) – cultural practitioner, magician and live artist; named "International Magician of the Year" in 1991; winner of the 1997 Golden Turban Award from the Magic Academy of Bangalore, in India[103]
- Diriye Osman – Somali-British writer and visual artist[244]
- Mohammed Mahbub "Ed" Husain – author of The Islamist, an account of his experience for five years with the Hizb ut-Tahrir[245][246]
- Emran Mian – author and policy advisor at Whitehall[247]
- Ghulam Murshid – author, scholar and journalist; has received numerous top literary awards from India and Bangladesh, including the Bangla Academy award[248]
- Idris Khan – artist based in London[249]
- Imtiaz Dharker – poet and documentary filmmaker[250]
- Kaniz Ali – makeup artist and freelance beauty columnist;[118] won the "Best Make-Up Artist" category at the 2011 International Asian Fashion Awards[119]
- Kia Abdullah – novelist and journalist; contributes to The Guardian newspaper[251] and has written two novels: Life, Love and Assimilation[252] and Child's Play[253]
- Mohsin Hamid – Pakistani writer; novels Moth Smoke (2000), The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007), and How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia (2013)[254]
- Monica Ali – author of Brick Lane, a novel based on a Bangladeshi woman[255]
- Moniza Alvi – poet and writer[256]
- Nadeem Aslam – novelist[257]
- Nadifa Mohamed – Somali-British novelist[258]
- Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed – author, lecturer, political scientist specialising in interdisciplinary security studies, and participant of the 9/11 Truth Movement[259]
- Omar Mansoor – London-based fashion designer, best known for his couture occasionwear[260]
- Qaisra Shahraz – novelist, journalist, Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and a director of Gatehouse Books[261]
- Rasheed Araeen – London-based conceptual artist, sculptor, painter, writer, and curator[262]
- Razia Iqbal – arts correspondent for the BBC; born in East Africa, of Muslim Punjabi origin[263]
- Rekha Waheed – writer and novelist best known as the author of The A-Z Guide To Arranged Marriage[264]
- Rezia Wahid MBE – award-winning textile artist whose work has been exhibited both in the UK and abroad[265]
- Roopa Farooki – novelist[266]
- Ruby Hammer MBE – fashion and beauty makeup artist;[267] founder of Ruby & Millie cosmetics bran[268]
- Ruh al-Alam – Islamic artist, founder of Islamic calligraphic artwork project Visual Dhikr[269][270]
- Runa Islam – film and photography visual artist, nominated for the Turner Prize 2008[142][143]
- Rupa Huq – senior lecturer in sociology at Kingston University, writer, columnist, Labour Party politician, music DJ and former Deputy Mayoress of the London Borough of Ealing[271]
- Sanchita Islam – visual media artist
- Shahida Rahman – award-winning author of Lascar, writer and publisher[272]
- Shamas Rehman – Kashmiri author,[273] activist and presenter residing in Oldham
- Shamim Azad – bilingual poet, storyteller and writer[274]
- Shamshad Khan – Manchester-based poet born in Leeds; editor on an anthology of black women's poetry; advised the Arts Council of England North West on literature[275][276]
- Shezad Dawood – artist based in London[277]
- Suhayl Saadi – literary and erotic novelist and radio/stage playwright
- Tahir Rashid – British-born poet, manager and entrepreneur in the Islamic media and Nasheed industry
- Tahmima Anam – author of A Golden Age, the "Best First Book" winner of the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize[278]
- Ziauddin Sardar – scholar, writer and cultural critic[24]
Military and police
- Ali Dizaei – senior police officer[279]
- Jabron Hashmi – soldier who was killed in action in Sangin, Afghanistan on 1 July 2006[280]
- Muhammed Akbar Khan – served as a British recruit in the First World War and an officer in Second World War;first Muslim to become a general in the British Army[281]
- Tarique Ghaffur – high-ranking British police officer in London's Metropolitan Police Service; Assistant Commissioner–Central Operations[282]
Policy
- Abul Fateh – diplomat and statesman;[283][284] first Foreign Secretary of Bangladesh after independence in 1971
- Anwar Choudhury – British High Commissioner for Bangladesh, 2004-2008; first non-white British person to be appointed in a senior diplomatic post; Director of International Institutions at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office[285]
- Asif Ahmad – British diplomat who served as the British Ambassador to Thailand from November 2010 until August 2012;[286] since July 2013, he has been British Ambassador to the Philippines[287]
- Dr Halima Begum – civil servant, international development manager and Director Education of East Asia at the British Council; previously first secretary for development at the Department for International Development[288]
- Nahid Majid OBE – civil servant, Chief Operating Officer of Regeneration Investment Organisation and Deputy Director within the Department for Work and Pensions[289] She is the most senior British Bangladeshi Muslim woman in the civil service
- Rohema Miah – independent policy adviser and former political adviser for the Labour Party, 1992-2005[290]
- Saleemul Huq – scientist and Senior Fellow in the Climate Change Group at the International Institute for Environment and Development; recipient of the 2007 Burtoni Award for his work on climate change adaptation[291]
- Talyn Rahman-Figueroa – director of diplomatic consultancy Grassroot Diplomat, said to be changing the very nature of diplomacy in the modern age[292]
Politics
Members of Parliament
- Anas Sarwar – former Scottish Labour deputy leader and Labour MP for Glasgow Central
- Imran Hussain – Labour MP for Bradford East
- Khalid Mahmood – Labour MP for Birmingham Perry Barr[293]
- Mohammad Sarwar – former Labour MP for Glasgow Central;[294] first British Muslim and Pakistani origin MP
- Naz Shah – Labour MP for the constituency of Bradford West[295]
- Nusrat Ghani – Conservative MP for Wealden
- Rehman Chishti – Conservative MP for Gillingham and Rainham
- Rosena Allin-Khan – Labour MP for Tooting[296]
- Rupa Huq – Labour MP for Ealing Central and Acton constituency
- Rushanara Ali – Labour MP for Bethnal Green and Bow Labour Party constituency; first person of Bangladeshi origin to be elected to the House of Commons;[297] one of the first three Muslim women to be elected as a Member of Parliament[298]
- Sajid Javid – Conservative MP for Bromsgrove and current Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport[299]
- Sadiq Khan – Mayor of London, former Labour MP for Tooting and formerShadow Secretary of State for Justice and Shadow Lord Chancellor[300]
- Shahid Malik – former Labour MP for Dewsbury; served as a Minister for International Development in Gordon Brown's government[301]
- Shabana Mahmood – Labour MP For Birmingham Ladywood
- Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh – SNP MP for Ochil and South Perthshire
- Tulip Siddiq – Labour MP for Hampstead and Kilburn constituency
- Yasmin Qureshi – Labour MP for Bolton South East
Peers
- Adam Hafejee, Lord Patel of Blackburn[302]
- Amirali Alibhai, Lord Bhatia – life peer[303]
- Arminka Helic, Baroness Helic – Bosnian-born British Special Adviser (SPAD) and Chief of Staff to the Former British Foreign Secretary William Hague[304][305]
- Gulam Khaderbhoy, Lord Noon MBE – life peer, businessman and Chancellor of the University of East London
- Haleh, Baroness Afshar – Professor in Politics and Women's Studies at the University of York, England
- Khalid, Lord Hameed – Chairman of Alpha Hospital Group; chairman and chief executive officer of the London International Hospital
- Kishwer Falkner, Baroness Falkner of Margravine – lead Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for Foreign Affairs in the House of Lords[306]
- Meral, Baroness Hussein-Ece – Liberal Democrat life peeress
- Mohamed Iltaf, Lord Sheikh – Chairman of Conservative Muslim Forum
- Nazir, Lord Ahmed – Crossbench life peer, formerly Labour[307]
- Nosheena Mobarik, Baroness Mobarik – Conservative Baroness of Mearns in the County of Renfrewshire; former Chairman of CBI Scotland[308]
- Manzila Pola, Baroness Uddin – Labour Party life peer, community activist, and first Muslim and Asian to sit in the House of Lords[309]
- Qurban, Lord Hussain – Liberal Democrat life peer
- Sayeeda Hussain, Baroness Warsi – Lawyer & British politician for the Conservative Party and a former member of the Cabinet[310]
- Shas Sheehan, Baroness Sheehan – Liberal Democrat and Baroness of Wimbledon in the London Borough of Merton and of Tooting in the London Borough of Wandsworth [311]
- Tariq Mahmood, Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon – life peer
- Waheed, Lord Alli – Labour life peer
- Zahida Manzoor, Baroness Manzoor – Liberal Democrat Baroness; former Legal Services Ombudsman; former Deputy Chair of the Commission for Racial Equality[312]
Members of the European Parliament
- Afzal Khan – solicitor and current Labour MEP for North West region;first Asian Lord Mayor of Manchester; currently Manchester City Council's Executive Member for Children's Services
- Amjad Bashir – UKIP MEP for Yorkshire and Humber; UKIP Small & Medium Business spokesman
- Bashir Khanbhai – former Conservative MEP for East of England
- Sajjad Karim MEP – born in Brierfield, Lancashire; qualified as a solicitor and started a number of successful lawyers practices before being elected as a Member of the European Parliament in 2007; Conservative Legal Affairs Spokesman; sits on the Industry, Research and Energy Committee
- Syed Kamall – Conservative MEP for London
Members of Scottish Parliament
- Anas Sarwar – Labour MSP for the Glasgow region[313]
- Bashir Ahmad – former SNP MSP[314]
- Hanzala Malik – Labour MSP for Glasgow
- Humza Yousaf – SNP Member of the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow and Minister for External Affairs and International Development[315]
Members of Welsh Assembly
- Mohammad Asghar – Welsh politician, representing Plaid Cymru[316]
- Altaf Hussain – former regional Assembly Member in the National Assembly for Wales from 2015 to 2016[317]
Mayors
- Jilani Chowdhury – Labour Party politician, councillor in Barnsbury and former Mayor of London Borough of Islington; in 2012, he became Islington's first Asian mayor[318]
- Lutfur Rahman – Cllr, community activist, local Independent politician; became the first directly elected Mayor of Tower Hamlets in 2010; first Bangladeshi leader of the council[319]
- Mohammed Ajeeb – former Lord Mayor of Bradford; first Asian (Pakistani) Lord Mayor in the UK[320]
- Muhammad Abdullah Salique – mayor of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets from 2008 to 2009[321]
- Sadiq Khan – elected Mayor of London in May 2016
Other
- Anwara Ali – Cllr, Conservative Party councillor in Regent's Park, Cabinet member for health and well-being in Tower Hamlets and General practitioner in Spitalfields Practice[322]
- Bashir Maan – Pakistani-Scottish politician, businessman and writer[323]
- Maya Ali – Cllr, Labour Party councillor in Westwood and solicitor[236]
- Muhammad Abdullah Salique, Cllr – Labour Party member, Councillor for Bethnal Green North ward, Mayor of London Borough of Tower Hamlets for 2008/09 municipal year[324]
- Murad Qureshi – Labour Party politician; Greater London Assembly Member[325]
- Cllr Nasim Ali – Labour Party politician, councillor in Regent's Park, Cabinet Member for Young People in Camden Council and former Mayor of Camden; in May 2003, at age 34, he became the country's youngest mayor as well as the UK's first Bangladeshi and first Muslim mayor[326]
- Rabina Khan, Cllr – Labour Party politician, councillor in Shadwell, cabinet member for housing in Tower Hamlets London Borough Council, community worker and author of Ayesha's Rainbow[327]
- Rohema Miah – Independent policy adviser and former political advisor for the Labour Party between 1992 and 2005[290]
- Salma Yaqoob – former leader of the left-wing Respect Party and a Birmingham City Councillor[328]
- Syeda Amina Khatun MBE – Labour Party councillor for Tipton Green in the Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council; first Bangladeshi woman to be elected in the Midlands region, in 1999[329]
- Tulip Siddiq – Labour Party councillor in Regent's Park and cabinet member for culture in Camden London Borough Council[330]
Religion
- Daud Abdullah – current Deputy Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain
- Maajid Nawaz – former member of the Islamic political group Hizb ut-Tahrir, now the co-founder and Executive Director of Quilliam, the world's first counter-extremism think tank
- Mohammad Naseem – former GP and the chairman of the Birmingham Mosque Trust[331]
- Saleem Sidwai – accountant and Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Wales[332]
- Vilayat Inayat Khan – eldest son of Sufi Murshid Hazrat Inayat Khan, head of the Sufi Order International[333]
Science and medicine
- Abu Eesa Niamatullah – qualified pharmacist and anthropologist;[334] based at the Cheadle Muslim Association in Stockport; member of the C-100, a World Economic Forum Initiative[335]
- Andy Miah – Professor in Ethics & Emerging Technologies; Director of the Creative Futures Research Centre[336] at the University of the West of Scotland
- Asif Chaudry – British surgical oncologist with an interest in gastrointestinal cancer[337]
- Asim Shahmalak – hair transplant surgeon and broadcaster, and proponent of such surgery; in 2009, he performed the UK's first eyelash transplant[338]
- Ghulam Sarwar – Director of the Muslim Educational Trust;[12] internationally recognised writer on Islam in English, especially for writing and publishing the first English textbook, Islam: Beliefs and Teachings, for madrasah students in Britain, which is used worldwide in religious education classes, especially in British schools[13]
- Haroon Ahmed – British Pakistani scientist in the fields of microelectronics and electrical engineering[10]
- Hasnat Khan – heart and lung surgeon who was romantically involved with Diana, Princess of Wales[339]
- Rozina Ali – microvascular reconstructive plastic surgeon and consultant with a specialist interest in breast reconstruction; television presenter[340]
- Sheraz Daya – ophthalmologist and eye surgeon, best known for his founding of the Centre for Sight in 1996 and his work in the use of stem-cell research during sight recovery surgery[341][342]
- Tipu Zahed Aziz – Professor of neurosurgery at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford; lecturer at Magdalen College, Oxford and Imperial College London medical school[5]
Sport
Boxing
- Adil Anwar – British light-welterweight boxer and multiple title winner[343]
- Adnan Amar – British light-middleweight boxer, multiple title winner[344]
- Amer Khan – former undefeated light-heavyweight boxer, Central Area championship winner
- Amir Khan – British light-welterweight Boxer, 2004 Olympics silver medalist, and former world champion
- Haroon Khan – super-flyweight boxer and commonwealth bronze medalist[345]
- Jawaid Khaliq, MBE – first British Asian to win a world title belt[346]
- Nadeem Siddique – former British welterweight boxer, multiple title winner[347]
- Naseem Hamed – former WBO, WBC, IBF, and Lineal featherweight champion, and European bantamweight champion[348]
- Qais Ashfaq – amateur boxer from Leeds and Commonwealth silver medallist[349]
- Tanveer Ahmed – former lightweight boxer, WBO Inter-Continental champion
- Usman Ahmed – super flyweight boxer, and YouTube sensation
Cricket
- Aamer Khan – Pakistani-born former English cricketer[350]
- Aamir Farooque – former Pakistani-born English cricketer[351]
- Adil Rashid – English cricketer who plays for Yorkshire and England Under-19s[352]
- Ajmal Shahzad – cricketer who plays for Yorkshire County Cricket Club and represents England in all three formats of the game[353]
- Akbar Ansari – English first-class and List A cricketer who played his First-class games for Cambridge University Cricket Club and Cambridge University Centre of Cricketing Excellence,[354] and List A cricket for Marylebone Cricket Club[355]
- Alamgir Sheriyar – cricketer whoplays for Leicestershire[356]
- Amar Rashid – English cricketer[357]
- Amjad Khan – cricketer for England International and the youngest to play for the Danish national team[358]
- Aquib Afzaal – left-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break[359]
- Arif Saeed – Pakistani-born English cricketer, right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm fast-medium[360]
- Asim Butt – Scottish and Pakistani cricketer who was primarily a left-arm medium fast bowler[361]
- Bilal Shafayat – cricketer[362]
- Hamza Riazuddin – English cricketer, right-handed lower-order batsman and a right-arm medium-fast bowler who plays for Hampshire
- Imraan Mohammad – English cricketer, right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break[363]
- Imran Arif – Pakistani-born English cricketer; fast-medium bowler; plays for Worcestershire County Cricket Club[364]
- Imran Jamshed – former Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace[365]
- Jahid Ahmed – cricketer who played country cricket for Essex as a right-handed lower order batsman and a right-arm medium-pace bowler[366]
- Kabir Ali – English cricketer, who formerly played for Worcestershire[367]
- Kadeer Ali – cricketer playing for Worcestershire; related to Kabir Ali[368][369]
- Kamran Afzaal – Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman[370]
- Majid Haq – Scottish cricket player
- Maneer Mirza – English cricketer; right-arm fast-medium bowler and right-handed batsman who played for Worcestershire[371]
- Moeen Ali – cricketer playing for Warwickshire[372]
- Mohammad Akhtar – Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break[373]
- Moneeb Iqbal – Scottish cricketer; right-handed batsman and leg-break bowler[374]
- Nadeem Malik – English cricketer; right-arm fast-medium seam bowler and right-handed lower-order batsman[375]
- Nadeem Mohammed – former English cricketer; right-handed batsman who played bowled right-arm medium pace[376]
- Nadeem Shahid – former English first-class cricketer who played for Essex and Surrey
- Naheem Sajjad – Pakistani-born English cricketer, a right-handed batsman who bowls left-arm fast-medium[377]
- Naqaash Tahir – English cricketer; right-arm fast-medium bowler who has played for Lancashire and Warwickshire[378]
- Nasser Hussain – former captain of England cricket team
- Omer Hussain – left-handed batsman; cousin of fellow Scottish international cricketer Majid Haq[379]
- Owais Shah – cricketer who plays for Middlesex and has appeared for England in a number of One Day Internationals and two Test matches[380]
- Qasim Sheikh – Scottish cricketer; has represented his country on more than 20 occasions[381]
- Rashid Shafayat – former English cricketer[382]
- Rawait Khan – former English cricketer who played for Derbyshire, Derbyshire CB, and Pakistan Customs in a four-year first-class career which saw him bowl mostly in Second XI Championship matches
- Rehan Alikhan – English-born former cricketer of Pakistani descent; right-handed batsman and off-break bowler[383]
- Sajid Mahmood – Punjabi origin cricketer who plays international cricket for England and county cricket for Lancashire[384]
- Saleem Mohammed – former English cricketer; right-handed batsman[385]
- Shaftab Khalid – English cricketer; right-arm off-spinner who also bats right-handed[386]
- Shammi Iqbal – English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm medium pace[387]
- Usman Afzaal – cricketer who has played three Test matches for England[388]
- Waqar Mohammad – former Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowled leg break[389]
- Wasim Khan MBE – first British-born Pakistani to play professional cricket in England; a talented left-handed batsman who also bowled right-arm medium pace[390]
- Zafar Ansari – English cricketer who plays for Cambridge University and Surrey County Cricket Club[391]
- Zoheb Sharif – left-handed batsman and a leg-break bowler[392]
Football
- Abbas Farid – freestyle footballer from Newport, South Wales;[393][394] named the "Freestyle King" on MTV in UK's Nike Freestyle competition
- Adam Docker – footballer, playing for Porthmadog F.C.[395]
- Adil Nabi – footballer who plays as a forward for West Bromwich Albion[396]
- Adnan Ahmed – footballer, playing for Tranmere Rovers[397]
- Amjad Iqbal – footballer, playing for Farsley Celtic F.C.[398]
- Anwar Uddin – professional footballer who plays as a defender; after joining Dagenham and Redbridge he became first British Asian to captain a side in the top four divisions;[399] plays for Sutton United[400]
- Atif Bashir – footballer with a (British Pakistani father and a Turkish German mother)[401]
- Iltaf Ahmed – British Pakistani footballer who was the number one goalkeeper of Pakistan national football team[402]
- Kashif Siddiqi – English-born Pakistani footballer[403]
- Mohamed Malimey – Somali football coach and a former amateur player[404]
- Otis Khan – footballer who plays as a midfielder for Matlock Town on loan from Sheffield United[405]
- Reis Ashraf – English-born Pakistani international footballer who plays for Buckingham Town in the United Counties League Division One[406][407]
- Shabir Khan – English-Pakistani international footballer who plays for Worcester City, having progressed through their youth system[408]
- Shahed Ahmed – former professional footballer who played as a striker for Wycombe Wanderers[409] He plays for Sporting Bengal United[410] and has now been appointed as captain
- Tahmina Begum – football referee and PE assistant; in 2010, she became the first qualified female referee of Bangladeshi descent in the UK[411][412]
- Usman Gondal – retired British-born Pakistani international footballer; retired in 2007[413]
- Zeeshan Rehman – football defender for Queens Park Rangers F.C.; first Pakistani and British Asian to play in the Premiership with Fulham F.C.[414][415]
- Nathan Ellington
Martial arts
- Qasim Beg – undefeated kickboxing champion, two-time world champion
- Imran Khan – two-time World Muay Thai champion[416]
- Kamal Shalorus – professional UFC fighter[417]
- Lutalo Muhammad – Taekwondo athlete
- Nisar Smiler – two-time karate world champion and 50-time gold medallist
- Ruqsana Begum – Muay Thai kickboxer; in 2010, she became the current British female Atomweight (48–50 kg) Muay Thai boxing champion; in September 2012, she was nominated as captain of the British Muay Thai Team[418]
- Ali Jacko – world champion kickboxer from east London
- Riaz Amin – Britain's youngest WEKAF (World Eskrima/Kali/Arnis Federation) world champion; practises Shotokan Karate and Filipino martial arts
Other
- Aadel Kardooni – former Leicester Tigers and England A rugby player[419]
- Abdi Jama – wheelchair basketball player, selected to play for Team GB in the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London
- Adam Khan – racing driver from Bridlington, Yorkshire; represents Pakistan in the A1 Grand Prix series; demonstration driver for the Renault F1 racing team[420]
- Adam Gemili – sprinter of Iranian and Moroccan heritage
- Bulbul Hussain – wheelchair rugby player; plays mostly in a defensive role for Kent Crusaders and the Great Britain paralympic team; in 2008 and 2012, he played for Great Britain at the Paralympic Games[421]
- Gaz Choudhry – wheelchair basketball player who was selected to play for Paralympics GB in the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London[422]
- Ikram Butt – former rugby league player; first south Asian to play either code of international rugby for England, in 1995; founder of the British Asian Rugby Association and the British Pakistani rugby league team[423]
- Imran Majid – professional British pool player[424]
- Imran Sherwani – former English field hockey player; was capped 45 times for Great Britain and 49 times for England[425]
- Kamran Panjavi – weightlifter at the 2004 Summer Olympics[369]
- Mo Farah – runner and twice Olympic gold medallist
- Mukhtar Mohammed – Somali-born British middle distance athlete specialising in the 800 metres[426]
- Shokat Ali – English snooker player of Pakistani descent; represents Pakistan in international tournaments
- Zia Mahmood – Pakistani professional bridge player; World Bridge Federation and American Contract Bridge League Grand Life Master[427]
- Hammad Miah – British snooker player
- Zubair Hoque – British single-seat racecar driver
Other
- Basil Al Bayati – architect, designer and writer; leading proponent of the school of Metaphoric Architecture
- Asif Ahmad – British diplomat, serving as the British Ambassador to the Republic of the Philippines
- Dr Humayra Abedin – National Health Service doctor of medicine who became a cause célèbre after her parents tried to force her into marriage and held her captive until she was freed by court order in 2008[428][429]
- Hussain Bisad – one of the tallest men in the world, at 2.32 m (7 ft 7 1⁄2 in)[430]
- Mazhar Majeed – sporting agent and bookmaker who came under police investigation in 2010 following reports of cricket match fixing after a News of the World sting operation[431]
- Robina Qureshi – Scottish human rights campaigner[432]
- Ruhal Ahmed – former Guantanamo Bay detainee depicted in the film The Road to Guantanamo[433][434]
- Saiman Miah – architecture student who designed the £5 coins for the London 2012 Summer Olympics Games[435][436]
- Sahil Saeed – boy kidnapped in Pakistan in 2010; released unharmed after the payment of a ransom[437]
- Shabina Begum – was involved in the leading House of Lords case UKHL 15 R (Begum) v Governors of Denbigh High School (2006)[438] on the legal regulation of religious symbols and dress under the Human Rights Act 1998
See also
- Islam in the United Kingdom
- Islam in England
- Islam in Northern Ireland
- Islam in Scotland
- Islam in Wales
- Religion in the United Kingdom
- List of American Muslims
- List of Canadian Muslims
References
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- ↑ Imperial College London.
- ↑ University of Nottingham
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- 1 2 "Prof. Tipu Aziz".
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- ↑ Research Europe
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- ↑ Islam, Aktar; Levin, Angela (18 July 2011). "Ban the balti: Drunks, tinned food and tikka masala – top chef says Indian restaurants have got it all wrong". Daily Mail. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
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- ↑ "Bangladeshi restaurant boss Bajloor Rashid made MBE". Kent: BBC News. 31 December 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
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- ↑ "Curry industry supremo is awarded MBE". Manchester Evening News. 2 January 2009. Retrieved 11 April 2011.
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- ↑ "James Caan, Sir Gulam Noon MBE and West Ham United celebrate Business School graduates success".
- ↑ Will, David (July 2011). "Latest News". Devon Faith & Belief Forum. Retrieved 1 December 2012. Dr. Husna Ahmad OBE
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- ↑ "Iqbal Wahhab: The restaurateur reveals all about his investment woes, blowing budgets and winning landlords over". startups.co.uk. 23 July 2008. Retrieved 25 May 2010. Taken from the book Starting Your Own Restaurant (Crimson Publishing)
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- ↑ "Tommy Miah". British Bengali Success Stories. BritBangla. 2003. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- ↑ Alibhai-Brown, Yasmin (5 July 1999). "Comment: Cool Britannia II — the Bangladeshis are coming". London: The Independent. Retrieved 27 August 2008.
- ↑ "The Indian Chef of the Year". Retrieved 24 May 2009.
- ↑ Ahmed, Maria (10 January 2013). "Investment Banker's Advice After 24 Years in the City!". BusinessBecause. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
- ↑ "Mumtaz Khan". Restaurant Hall of Fame. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ↑ "Muquim Ahmed". London: The Sunday Times. 27 April 2008. Retrieved 24 May 2009.
- ↑ "Muquim Ahmed". Restaurant Hall of Fame. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
- ↑ Leftly, Mark (15 July 2012). "Kheraj bids to take over at Barclays". The Independent. London.
- ↑ "Barclays plc (BARC:London)". Bloomberg. London. 15 July 2012.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2011..
- ↑ "Chop Shop: London Garage". Discovery Channel. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
- ↑ "Ragib Ali". Retrieved 22 October 2009.
- ↑ Graham, Jefferson (20 December 2012). "Start-up travel site offers a Peek at hidden gems". USA Today. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
- ↑ "Food Entrepreneur Wins AOC Gold Award". 5 June 2005. Retrieved 6 January 2008.
- ↑ McNally, Alex (25 April 2009). "Restaurant boss Siraj praised for community dedication". Essex: Echo. Retrieved 1 January 2013.
- ↑ "Bangladeshi restaurant entrepreneur honoured". Manchester Evening News. Manchester. 19 October 2011. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
- ↑ "An Interview with Sultan Choudhury, Islamic Bank of Britain". New Horizon. 19 May 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- ↑ "British Bangladeshis who have made a mark". New Age Xtra. 10–16 October 2008.
- ↑ http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2005/dec/02/news.business
- ↑ "British Bengali Success Stories". Dr Wali Tasar Uddin, MBE. BritBangla. Retrieved 13 December 2008.
- ↑ "Dr Wali Tasar Uddin, MBE, JP" (PDF). British Bangladeshi Who's Who. October 2008. Retrieved 13 December 2008.
- ↑ "British Honorary Awards Recipients – Civil Division". 2007. Retrieved 17 October 2007.
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- ↑ "Adnan Sami to sing in Bengali". rediff.com. 13 December 2004. Archived from the original on 3 February 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
- ↑ "'Music is the medium of love'". Pakistan Dawn. 21 December 2003. Archived from the original on 3 February 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
- ↑ "Muslims in Indian music". Screen. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
- ↑ "Urdu to the rescue". Screen. 27 December 2002. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
- ↑ "NR chats to GOF's Patil twins". BBC News. 17 November 2005. Retrieved 11 June 2007.
- 1 2 Khan, Aaliyah (August 2014). "Inspirational Nasheed singer launches new album" (113 ed.). Sheffield: Burngreave Messenger. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
- ↑ "Ahsan Khan Actor British Born Pakistani". Urduwire.com. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
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- ↑ Bremner, Charles (15 December 2008). "'Forced marriage' doctor, Humayra Abedin, freed by Bangladesh court". London: BBC News.
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