Turkey finances Mauritania’s Brotherhood through relief work
A large number of Mauritanians organized a popular
demonstration in front of the Turkish embassy in the capital Nouakchott against
the Turkish and Qatari presence in the country.
Turkey’s involvement in Mauritania by means of the National
Rally for Reform and Development Party (Tawassoul) is part of Ankara's
strategic vision to penetrate several regions in Africa, especially in the
western and central regions of the continent, as well as to encircle North
Africa and the Sahel and Sahara region. Mauritania is the cornerstone of this
scheme.
Meanwhile, Mauritanian media reports revealed the amount of
Turkish funding for the Mauritanian Brotherhood. A confidential report prepared
by the Mauritanian authorities stated that Turkey pumps more than $2 million
annually into charities in Mauritania, but 85% of that amount is given to
organizations with a political background that are linked to Turkey’s Justice
and Development Party (AKP) and other Brotherhood-affiliated Islamist currents,
according to the Mauritanian news agency Al-Nabae.
According to the report, the charitable organizations
benefiting from Turkish money are employing the funds for Tawassoul’s political
propaganda in the countryside, inner cities and some poor neighborhoods in
Nouakchott, by providing them with drinking water services in the countryside,
building clinics and financing income-generating activities in order to gain
the loyalty of these communities for the Brother-backed political party
opposing the regime, which has been calling for the overthrow of the regime throughout
past year by simulating revolutions in some Arab countries with Turkish
support.
The Mauritanian newspaper Al-Badil also revealed ways that Turkey
finances the Brotherhood, reporting that Tawassoul regularly receives funds
estimated at tens of millions of dollars from Brotherhood organizations in
Qatar and Turkey, which are transferred through merchants affiliated with the
Brotherhood in Mauritania and Angola.
The report mentioned that the Turkish embassy in Nouakchott
directly sponsors the activities of Mauritanian charitable organizations and
provides them with training opportunities, working in parallel to contain
Mauritanian media by regularly sending groups of journalists on visits to
Turkey in order to promote the Turkish regime and turn a blind eye its growing
influence in Mauritania.
Al-Badil added that the Mauritania branch of the Brotherhood
possesses bodies that are responsible for collecting money and facilitating the
subscription of terrorist movements, serving as the terrorist organization's
legal, strategic, political, trade, financial, charitable and spiritual arms.
The newspaper noted that the Brotherhood controls large
commercial enterprises and is managing huge budgets that affect all commercial
fields, including pharmacies, petrol stations, clothing and food stores, and
car rental agencies, as well as the sale of hard currencies on the black
market.
In September 2018, the Mauritanian authorities launched a
campaign to close and ban institutions affiliated with the Brotherhood in the
country. Mauritanian bloggers leaked a list of dozens of institutions, bodies
and unions affiliated with the movement that are expected to be closed and banned
in the coming days as part of the ongoing campaign to eradicate the Brotherhood
from Mauritania.
The Mauritanian government said that investigations into the
financing a scientific center and a university revealed the existence of
“suspicions with regard to funding and spending.”
The Brotherhood relies on a number of axes to penetrate the powers
of the Mauritanian economy under the guise of supporting civil and social
activities, according to a report by Mahmoud Gamal Abdel Al at the Arab
Research Center.
They are also clearly active in advertising, which is one of
the most important weapons that Tawassoul relies on to confront government
policies against it, using a large number of online platforms and newspapers,
such as Al-Akhbar and Al-Sarraj, as well as charitable and social activities. They
take advantage of the licenses granted to the Brotherhood’s charitable
societies and organizations to facilitate access to foreign aid and funding in
order to support its political agenda.
In September 2018, the Mauritanian government closed
Abdullah bin Yassin University and the Scholars Training Center headed by
Mohamed al-Dido, who leads the terrorist Brotherhood in Mauritania. The
university is considered a stronghold for the terrorist group to spread
extremist and terrorist ideas, generating generations of terrorists using
religious slogans as cover for their actions.
The campaign to close Brotherhood institutions in 2019
included the Al-Khair Development organization and the World Assembly of Muslim
Youth branch, both Brotherhood groups, against the background of “suspicions
regarding funding and spending.”
These two institutions were closed less than a month after
the government enacted the Anti-Terrorism Financing and Money Laundering Law,
which aims to strengthen the regime’s fight against terrorism by blocking
funding outlets, in addition to military and security mechanisms.



