UAE designated Islamic Relief Worldwide as a terrorist organisation in 2014
German officials have accused Islamic Relief
Worldwide of “significant” connections to the underground Muslim Brotherhood,
triggering concerns among politicians over the diversion of official funds to
Islamists.
A submission to the Bundesrat revealed that the
powerful Federal Court of Audit was examining official grants to Islamic
Relief, which was founded in Birmingham, UK, that totalled €6.1 million in the
years to 2016. The response said Islamic Relief was connected to Muslim
Brotherhood groups not only in Europe but around the world.
Liberal MP Oliver Luksic said the answer was deeply
alarming. "It is a scandal that German taxpayers' money is going to go to
Islamists," he said.
The centrist party has called on the German
government to address the issue as an “urgent problem” and said its refusal to
accept concerns expressed by parliament was a matter of deep concern.
Most of the German funding provided to Islamic
Relief was designated for projects in Syria, the statement added.
The United Arab Emirates designated Islamic Relief
Worldwide as a terrorist organisation in 2014 over its global links to the
Muslim Brotherhood. Meanwhile concerns over the provenance of funds led global
banking giant HSBC to shut down Islamic Relief’s accounts as had the Swiss
banking corporation UBS four years earlier.
The announcement of a German review into official
funding of Brotherhood-related groups comes amid growing concern over the
spreading influence of the group in the country. The most recent published
intelligence assessment said that there were an estimated 1,040 Brotherhood
activists active in the country. It further said the group exerted active
control over 50 mosques or Islamic centres.
Following concerns about the group’s underground
influence at centres in Bonn, Colletta Manemann, Germany’s Integration
Commissioner, warned that mosque-goers were targeted by the group. “To our
knowledge, the Brotherhood is more in the focus of the security agencies than ever
before,” she said. “We welcome that.”
Islamic Relief Worldwide rejected the claims and
said it was seeking clarification from the authorities.
“Allegations surfacing in the German media claiming
that Islamic Relief Worldwide has ties to the Muslim Brotherhood are damaging,
defamatory and false," it said. "Islamic Relief is a purely
humanitarian organisation, which categorically has no ties to any political
group.
“To ensure no abuse of the organisation of any kind
occurs, Islamic Relief employs comprehensive control mechanisms – including
screening all staff, trustees and volunteers and ensuring that financial
transfers require multiple approvals – that preclude any individual from making
use of IRW’s projects and/or funds for extraneous purposes. These control
mechanisms have been applauded in independent audit reports.
“Our independent affiliate office in Germany is in
contact with the local authorities to seek clarifications on this urgent
matter.”
On its website, the group sets out its history of
working with governments since it was founded in Britain by Egyptian Hany El
Banna. It became the first specialist Muslim charity to gain British government
funding for projects in Africa in 1994.
It signed a framework partnership with the EU in
2002 and became a member of the UK’s Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) which
distributes funds from nationwide appeals in 2005. In Britain alone its annual
Ramadan campaign raises more than £10 million annually.
Political concerns in German over the Brotherhood
have led warnings that groups Islamic Community of Germany, known by the
initials IGD, actively seeks to be the government’s recognised partner in
dealing with Muslim-focussed issues of policy and community relations.
The official intelligence report stated as much in
2018 and said members went to actively concealed their ideological beliefs.
“The goal of the IGD is to be the recognised contact point in Germany for
established Islam,” it said. “It therefore pursues a Muslim Brotherhood
ideology-oriented strategy of influence in the political and social sphere.
“At public appearances, confessions to the Muslim
Brotherhood and any anti-constitutional statements are avoided. Nevertheless,
the activities of the IGD centres are rooted in the ideological orientation of
the Muslim Brotherhood, including negative attitudes towards Western values and
an antipathy to democracy.”
Volker Beck, a Green Party politician, said the
Brotherhood had built up ties with the main Islamic body for German Turks,
using a conference organised in Cologne late last year as a platform for
pan-European ambitions. “At the conference at the Islamic centre in Cologne
there was the presence of the Muslim Brotherhood,” he said. “This event is
quite interesting and a bit terrifying. They are not anymore trying to organise
the Muslims in Germany but on a European level.”



