"It was a long time ago."
Dr Hamid, who works as a GP in a deprived area of Liverpool, said: "The far right are a spectrum so there are those who are very, very extreme but there are people who have certain issues, whether political or personal, and they need to vent that."If you don’t provide them with a platform to do that, they will go on to the streets."
Mr Kelwick, who became a Muslim in 1999, has engaged with several groups in open mosque forums during the past decade, discussing the impact of grooming gangs among other topics.And he said there was nearly always progress."Every single event has had people who are very angry - shouting sometimes - very upset, but everyone comes together after a time," he said.
He remembered how one man nearly broke down in tears after being invited to a restaurant meal following an event."He said no one had treated him like that before. All we had done was buy him a kebab."
Mr Kelwick, who saw some of Saturday’s later clashes on the city’s Pier Head from a distance, said it was not a situation for "bridge-building".
"There are thugs among them but there are also genuine concerns," he said.The code adds that it is "primarily a matter of judgement for ministers who are personally responsible for deciding how to act" in relation to accepting gifts.
The monthly register will include details and the value of gifts worth more than £140, as well as hospitality, received and given by ministers in their ministerial capacity.revealed the prime minister is renting out his family home in north London after moving into Downing Street.
Sir Keir is not the first prime minister to do so - David Cameron also rented out his family home and Theresa May rented out a flat she owned in central London.The list includes any relevant private interests which could be perceived to give rise to a conflict with a minister's public duties.