Image copyright Getty Images
The chairman of the Conservative Muslim Forum has accused his party of a failure to take motion on Islamophobia and joined requires an impartial inquiry.
Mohammed Amin mentioned the party was perceived as being "anti-Muslim" and had prioritised electoral considerations reasonably than taking "decisive action".
"There have been a number of incidents," he informed the BBC.
A Tory spokesman mentioned the party took all allegations severely.
"The party has acted quickly when presented with evidence of inappropriate behaviour, suspending those involved and launching immediate investigations."
Last week the Muslim Council of Britain urged the party to launch an impartial inquiry into alleged Islamophobia, saying there have been now "more than weekly incidents" involving Tory candidates and representatives.
Mr Amin, who revealed his criticism in an Independent interview, mentioned the discussion board's intervention was impartial of the Muslim Council of Britain's demand.
He gave the instance of Harrow East MP Bob Blackman, who hosted occasions in Parliament which a controversial Hindu nationalist attended.
At the time of the occasions, Labour and the MCB mentioned Tapan Ghosh held "abhorrent" views about Muslims.
Mr Blackman mentioned he did not remorse sharing a platform with him, however did not agree with Tweets despatched by Mr Ghosh about Muslims. Mr Ghosh has additionally insisted he's not Islamophobic.
Mr Amin additionally criticised the unsuccessful London mayoral marketing campaign of Zac Goldsmith, who tried to hyperlink his Labour rival Sadiq Khan to Islamist extremists.
He mentioned he had been a Conservative member for 35 years and did not wish to "rock the boat" however: "The Conservative Muslim Forum decided unanimously that the matter was so serious that we should actually make our position known publicly."
The Conservative hierarchy had "wished the issue would go away" reasonably than cope with it, he mentioned, including that whereas the party was not anti-Muslim it had "given excessive priority to electoral consideration rather than taking decisive action".
He additionally drew parallels with complaints about anti-Semitism in Labour ranks, warning of events turning into "identified by racial or religious lines".
"There are bad eggs in all parties but you don't get the same bad eggs in every party," he additionally mentioned.