Sir Keir Starmer has condemned the decision as “wrong” and suggested it amounted to anti-Semitism, while Craig Guilford, the force’s chief constable, has been accused of “fabricating evidence” of hooliganism to satisfy a ban “demanded by Islamists”. In a letter published by MPs on Tuesday, Mr Guilford said his officers “undertook extensive community engagement prior to the fixture” including with “Muslim community leaders and mosque representatives”. The Telegraph can now reveal that three of the eight Muslim organisations that the force consulted as part of its “community engagement” drive have hosted preachers who promoted anti-Semitic conspiracy theories or called for...