GERMANY BANS MUSLIM GROUP ACCUSED OF ADVOCATING CALIPHATE

Read Time:59 Second

 

Germany on Wednesday banned a Muslim group over accusations of anti-constitutional activities, including calling for the establishment of a caliphate, the interior ministry said.

Police raided seven buildings in the northern port city of Hamburg, where the Muslim Interaktiv group was based, as the ban was announced.

“We will not allow organisations such as ‘Muslim Interaktiv’ to undermine our free society with their hatred… and attack our country from within,” Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, of the centre-right CDU/CSU bloc, said.

The association came under fire in April 2024 during a rally in Hamburg where more than 1,200 people demonstrated, denouncing Germany’s allegedly Islamophobic policies.

Hamburg’s interior minister, Andy Grote of the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), welcomed the ban and said that authorities had “eliminated a dangerous and very active Islamist group”.

Police on Wednesday also searched buildings in Berlin and the western state of Hesse as part of investigations into two other groups, “Generation Islam” and “Realitaet Islam”.

Germany has previously banned a number of Muslim organisations, such as the NGO Ansaar, which was accused in 2021 of financing Islamist terrorism under the guise of charitable work.

AFP

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %