List of British Muslims
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
This is an incomplete list of notable British Muslims.
Contents
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
- 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 – Actor, Producer, Broadcaster, played 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[citation needed]
- 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 – senior member of the Labour Party; former Chair of the Fabian Society think tank; serving as the Shadow Lord Chancellor[242]
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
- 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;[296] one of the first three Muslim women to be elected as a Member of Parliament[297]
- Sajid Javid – Conservative MP for Bromsgrove and current Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport[298]
- Sadiq Khan – Mayor of London, former Labour MP for Tooting and formerShadow Secretary of State for Justice and Shadow Lord Chancellor[299]
- Shahid Malik – former Labour MP for Dewsbury; served as a Minister for International Development in Gordon Brown's government[300]
- 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[301]
- Amirali Alibhai, Lord Bhatia – life peer[302]
- Arminka Helic, Baroness Helic – Bosnian-born British Special Adviser (SPAD) and Chief of Staff to the Former British Foreign Secretary William Hague[303][304]
- 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[305]
- 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[306]
- Nosheena Mobarik, Baroness Mobarik – Conservative Baroness of Mearns in the County of Renfrewshire; former Chairman of CBI Scotland[307]
- Manzila Pola, Baroness Uddin – Labour Party life peer, community activist, and first Muslim and Asian to sit in the House of Lords[308]
- 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[309]
- 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 [310]
- 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[311]
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.[312]
- Bashir Ahmad – former SNP MSP[313]
- Hanzala Malik – Labour MSP for Glasgow
- Humza Yousaf – SNP Member of the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow and Minister for External Affairs and International Development[314]
Members of Welsh Assembly
- Mohammad Asghar - Welsh politician, representing Plaid Cymru[315]
- Altaf Hussain - former regional Assembly Member in the National Assembly for Wales from 2015 to 2016.[316]
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[317]
- 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[318]
- Mohammed Ajeeb – former Lord Mayor of Bradford; first Asian (Pakistani) Lord Mayor in the UK[319]
- Muhammad Abdullah Salique – mayor of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets from 2008 to 2009[320]
- 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[321]
- Bashir Maan – Pakistani-Scottish politician, businessman and writer[322]
- 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[323]
- Murad Qureshi – Labour Party politician; Greater London Assembly Member[324]
- 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[325]
- 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."[326]
- 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[327]
- 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[328]
- Tulip Siddiq – Labour Party councillor in Regent's Park and cabinet member for culture in Camden London Borough Council[329]
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[330]
- Saleem Sidwai – accountant and Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Wales[331]
- Vilayat Inayat Khan – eldest son of Sufi Murshid Hazrat Inayat Khan, head of the Sufi Order International[332]
Science and medicine
- Abu Eesa Niamatullah – qualified pharmacist and anthropologist;[333] based at the Cheadle Muslim Association in Stockport; member of the C-100, a World Economic Forum Initiative[334]
- Andy Miah – Professor in Ethics & Emerging Technologies; Director of the Creative Futures Research Centre[335] at the University of the West of Scotland
- Asif Chaudry – British surgical oncologist with an interest in gastrointestinal cancer[336]
- Asim Shahmalak – hair transplant surgeon and broadcaster, and proponent of such surgery; in 2009, he performed the UK's first eyelash transplant[337]
- 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[338]
- Rozina Ali – microvascular reconstructive plastic surgeon and consultant with a specialist interest in breast reconstruction; television presenter[339]
- 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[340][341]
- 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[342]
- Adnan Amar – British light-middleweight boxer, multiple title winner[343]
- 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[344]
- Jawaid Khaliq, MBE – first British Asian to win a world title belt[345]
- Nadeem Siddique – former British welterweight boxer, multiple title winner[346]
- Naseem Hamed – former WBO, WBC, IBF, and Lineal featherweight champion, and European bantamweight champion[347]
- Qais Ashfaq – amateur boxer from Leeds and Commonwealth silver medallist[348]
- 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[349]
- Aamir Farooque – former Pakistani-born English cricketer[350]
- Adil Rashid – English cricketer who plays for Yorkshire and England Under-19s[351]
- Ajmal Shahzad – cricketer who plays for Yorkshire County Cricket Club and represents England in all three formats of the game[352]
- 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,[353] and List A cricket for Marylebone Cricket Club[354]
- Alamgir Sheriyar – cricketer whoplays for Leicestershire[355]
- Amar Rashid – English cricketer[356]
- Amjad Khan – cricketer for England International and the youngest to play for the Danish national team[357]
- Aquib Afzaal – left-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break[358]
- Arif Saeed – Pakistani-born English cricketer, right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm fast-medium[359]
- Asim Butt – Scottish and Pakistani cricketer who was primarily a left-arm medium fast bowler[360]
- Bilal Shafayat – cricketer[361]
- 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[362]
- Imran Arif – Pakistani-born English cricketer; fast-medium bowler; plays for Worcestershire County Cricket Club[363]
- Imran Jamshed – former Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace[364]
- Jahid Ahmed – cricketer who played country cricket for Essex as a right-handed lower order batsman and a right-arm medium-pace bowler[365]
- Kabir Ali – English cricketer, who formerly played for Worcestershire[366]
- Kadeer Ali – cricketer playing for Worcestershire; related to Kabir Ali[367][368]
- Kamran Afzaal – Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman[369]
- Majid Haq – Scottish cricket player
- Maneer Mirza – English cricketer; right-arm fast-medium bowler and right-handed batsman who played for Worcestershire[370]
- Moeen Ali – cricketer playing for Warwickshire[371]
- Mohammad Akhtar – Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm off break[372]
- Moneeb Iqbal – Scottish cricketer; right-handed batsman and leg-break bowler[373]
- Nadeem Malik – English cricketer; right-arm fast-medium seam bowler and right-handed lower-order batsman[374]
- Nadeem Mohammed – former English cricketer; right-handed batsman who played bowled right-arm medium pace[375]
- 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[376]
- Naqaash Tahir – English cricketer; right-arm fast-medium bowler who has played for Lancashire and Warwickshire[377]
- Nasser Hussain – former captain of England cricket team
- Omer Hussain – left-handed batsman; cousin of fellow Scottish international cricketer Majid Haq[378]
- Owais Shah – cricketer who plays for Middlesex and has appeared for England in a number of One Day Internationals and two Test matches[379]
- Qasim Sheikh – Scottish cricketer; has represented his country on more than 20 occasions[380]
- Rashid Shafayat – former English cricketer[381]
- 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[382]
- Sajid Mahmood – Punjabi origin cricketer who plays international cricket for England and county cricket for Lancashire[383]
- Saleem Mohammed – former English cricketer; right-handed batsman[384]
- Shaftab Khalid – English cricketer; right-arm off-spinner who also bats right-handed[385]
- Shammi Iqbal – English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowls right-arm medium pace[386]
- Usman Afzaal – cricketer who has played three Test matches for England[387]
- Waqar Mohammad – former Pakistani-born English cricketer; right-handed batsman who bowled leg break[388]
- 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[389]
- Zafar Ansari – English cricketer who plays for Cambridge University and Surrey County Cricket Club[390]
- Zoheb Sharif – left-handed batsman and a leg-break bowler[391]
Football
- Abbas Farid – freestyle footballer from Newport, South Wales;[392][393] named the "Freestyle King" on MTV in UK's Nike Freestyle competition
- Adam Docker – footballer, playing for Porthmadog F.C.[394]
- Adil Nabi – footballer who plays as a forward for West Bromwich Albion[395]
- Adnan Ahmed – footballer, playing for Tranmere Rovers[396]
- Amjad Iqbal – footballer, playing for Farsley Celtic F.C.[397]
- 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;[398] plays for Sutton United[399]
- Atif Bashir – footballer with a (British Pakistani father and a Turkish German mother)[400]
- Iltaf Ahmed – British Pakistani footballer who was the number one goalkeeper of Pakistan national football team[401]
- Kashif Siddiqi – English-born Pakistani footballer[402]
- Mohamed Malimey – Somali football coach and a former amateur player[403]
- Otis Khan – footballer who plays as a midfielder for Matlock Town on loan from Sheffield United[404]
- Reis Ashraf – English-born Pakistani international footballer who plays for Buckingham Town in the United Counties League Division One[405][406]
- Shabir Khan – English-Pakistani international footballer who plays for Worcester City, having progressed through their youth system[407]
- Shahed Ahmed – former professional footballer who played as a striker for Wycombe Wanderers[408] He plays for Sporting Bengal United[409] 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[410][411]
- Usman Gondal – retired British-born Pakistani international footballer; retired in 2007[412]
- Zeeshan Rehman – football defender for Queens Park Rangers F.C.; first Pakistani and British Asian to play in the Premiership with Fulham F.C.[413][414]
- Nathan Ellington
Martial arts
- Qasim Beg – undefeated kickboxing champion, two-time world champion
- Imran Khan – two-time World Muay Thai champion[415]
- Kamal Shalorus – professional UFC fighter[416]
- 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[417]
- 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[418]
- 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[419]
- 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[420]
- Gaz Choudhry – wheelchair basketball player who was selected to play for Paralympics GB in the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London[421]
- 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[422]
- Imran Majid – professional British pool player[423]
- Imran Sherwani – former English field hockey player; was capped 45 times for Great Britain and 49 times for England[424]
- Kamran Panjavi – weightlifter at the 2004 Summer Olympics[368]
- Mo Farah – runner and twice Olympic gold medallist
- Mukhtar Mohammed – Somali-born British middle distance athlete specialising in the 800 metres[425]
- 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[426]
- 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[427][428]
- Hussain Bisad – one of the tallest men in the world, at Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).[429]
- 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[430]
- Robina Qureshi – Scottish human rights campaigner[431]
- Ruhal Ahmed – former Guantanamo Bay detainee depicted in the film The Road to Guantanamo[432][433]
- Saiman Miah – architecture student who designed the £5 coins for the London 2012 Summer Olympics Games[434][435]
- Sahil Saeed – boy kidnapped in Pakistan in 2010; released unharmed after the payment of a ransom[436]
- Shabina Begum – was involved in the leading House of Lords case UKHL 15 R (Begum) v Governors of Denbigh High School (2006)[437] 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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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Akram Khan
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Akram Khan
- ↑ Alyy Khan and Angelina Jolie?
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- ↑ Art Malik Biography (1952–)
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- ↑ BBC News 'South Asians in Hollywood'
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0080374/
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- ↑ [10]. The Times.
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- ↑ http://uk.ign.com/articles/2015/09/10/how-gta-online-has-changed-rockstar-north
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tag; name "newagebdIslam" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 143.0 143.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Cite error: Invalid
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