Washington, May 16 (IANS) The presumptive Republican candidate in the US presidential election, Donald Trump, has called on Muslims to work with police and "turn people in".
Trump on Sunday said he was not anti-Muslim, but "anti-terror", BBC reported.
Trump was reacting to remarks by British Prime Minister David Cameron that he was "stupid, divisive and wrong" in calling for Muslims to be banned from the US.
Trump made the call last year, when he was not the party's front-runner. The New York billionaire said when he called for an immediate temporary ban on Muslims being allowed into America, there had been criticism only from politicians.
Millions of people from all over the world had called in, he said, saying "Donald Trump is right".
Asked whether he would re-phrase those comments in the light of the controversy they caused, Trump said: "It got people thinking. Whether it's good for me or bad for me, I don't really care."
"Something very bad" was going on that people pretended did not exist, Trump said.
The world had a tremendous problem with radical Islamic terror, the Republican said.
"If you look at it world-wide, the world is blowing up. And it's not people from Sweden that's doing the damage, okay?"
It is up to Muslims to turn in people they suspected of extremism, he said.
"They have to work with the police. They're not turning them in. If they're not playing ball, it's not going to work out."
Referring to Cameron's criticism, Trump said it looked like he was not going to have a good relationship with the British prime minister.
He also criticised the new Mayor of London Sadiq Khan for calling him "ignorant".
The New Yorker is one of the least politically experienced nominees in the US history, having never held elected office.
Many senior Republicans have refused to back him. All other Republican rivals have dropped out of the campaign.
Protests have plagued his campaign, with particular focus on his plan to build a wall on the Mexican border and deport 11 million undocumented immigrants.
On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton appears closer to the nomination, having secured more delegates than challenger Bernie Sanders.