Germany outlaws Islamist organization Ansaar International
Interior Minister Horst Seehofer announced on Wednesday that Germany has banned the Islamist organization Ansaar International and several of its sub-organizations.
"The network finances terrorism worldwide with
donations," Seehofer's spokesman Steve Alter tweeted on Wednesday.
Alter quoted Seehofer as saying: "If you want to fight
terror, you have to dry up its sources of money."
The Düsseldorf-based Islamist association stands accused of
sending funds to terrorist groups abroad including the Al-Nusra Front in Syria,
the Palestinian Hamas (which is on a European Union terrorism blacklist) and
Al-Shabab in Somalia.
The interior ministry said that some of the money donated
would go to projects that could be counted as "directly within the sphere
of activity of one or another of these terrorist organizations."
It said some of the group's missionary activities also
contravened German law.
Where were raids conducted?
Raids were carried out across 10 states on Wednesday
morning. Affected states included Rhineland-Palatinate, Baden-Württemberg,
Bavaria, Berlin, Brandenburg, Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), Lower
Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein and Hesse.
About half of the 90 people affected were in NRW, the state
which Düsseldorf is situated in.
Ansaar International's website says that its humanitarian
projects help "people in need at home and abroad," with projects in
Lebanon, Sudan and the Palestinian territories advertised.
Which other groups were banned?
The network of associations that have now been banned also
includes the Änis Ben-Hatira Foundation (named after the German-Tunisian
football player), the Somali Committee for Information and Advice in Darmstadt,
the women's rights association ANS.Justice, and second-hand charity stores Umma
Shop and Better World Appeal.
German newspaper die Zeit reported on its website that the
so-called sub-organizations were formally independent but were in fact a
network financially dependent on one another, "serving the sole purpose of
disguising the flow of money" under the control of the chairman of Ansaar
International.
Security authorities carried out a major raid on the Ansaar
network in April 2019 during which extensive material was seized, prompting a
series of investigations and becoming the starting point for the ban.
Who are Germany's Salafists?
Ansaar and an affiliated organization "spread a
Salafist world view and finance terror around the world under the guise of
humanitarian aid," Seehofer said.
Children from Germany would be sent to institutions set up
by Ansaar International abroad "in order to internalize Salafist extremist
content there and carry it back to Germany," he added.
Some Salafists — strict Sunni Muslims — seek the
implementation of Sharia law. Militants advocate violence to establish states
with theocratic rule.
Germany's domestic intelligence said in its annual report
last year that the country's number of Salafists had increased to an all-time
high of 12,150 in 2019, listing them among "Islamist extremists."
According to the report, the number of Salafists had more
than tripled since 2011 and the Salafist scene in Germany was going through a
"consolidation stage," with followers keeping a low public profile.
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