Tawassoul: Turkey's gateway to influence in Mauritania
A large uprising by the Mauritanian people against the
Turkish and Qatari presence in the country occurred during a popular
demonstration in front of the Turkish embassy in the capital, Nouakchott.
The regime of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan seeks
to penetrate and control Mauritania’s resources, as well as take the country as
a base to penetrate the rest of Africa and also threaten Europe.
Turkey’s ambitions in Mauritania focused on the desire of
Turkish companies to obtain the wealth of Mauritanians through the gateway of
investment, which constitutes an economic interface to penetrate, control and
support Turkey's tools in the country, especially Brotherhood-affiliated
organizations and the National Rally for Reform and Development Party
(Tawassoul).
Mohamed al-Hassan Ould al-Dido al-Shanqeeti, the spiritual
father of the Brotherhood and extremist groups in Mauritania, who resides in
the Brotherhood’s capital, Istanbul, and Mohamed Jemil Ould Mansour, the former
Secretary-General of Tawassoul, are the most important keys for Turkey to
penetrate Mauritania.
The Brotherhood-affiliated Tawassoul Party, which was
inaugurated in the summer of 2007, is considered the most prominent heir to
political Islamism in Mauritania. The party follows the ideology of the
Brotherhood and is influenced by the ideas of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb.
The Brotherhood’s ideology first appeared in Mauritania in
the mid-1970s with the establishment of the centrist reformist movement. The
Islamic group was the first such organization in Mauritania. The Brotherhood-backed
movement developed until they founded the Hasam organization in 1990, then the
Umma Party and finally the Tawassoul Party.
According to party data, Tawassoul has about 100,000 supporters.
The party is headed by Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Sidi, who was elected president of
the party in December 2017, succeeding Ould Mansour.
Turkey’s involvement in Mauritania by means of Tawassoul is
part of Ankara's strategic vision to infiltrate several regions of Africa,
especially in the western and central regions of the continent, with Mauritania
representing a cornerstone of this scheme.
The Mauritanian newspaper Al-Badil reported that Tawassoul
receives funds estimated at tens of millions of dollars from Brotherhood
organizations based in Qatar and Turkey transferred through merchants in
Mauritania and Angola.
Former Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz –
despite his grandmother’s relationship with Qatar – noted that they were afraid
of the role of Turkey and Qatar and their support for the Brotherhood would
threaten the stability of the Mauritanian state.
Ould Abdel Aziz said in a press interview, “It is not normal
for one party to use Islam and monopolize it. This is unacceptable, and it will
not be acceptable in the future.” He also did not rule out taking measures
against Tawassoul.
“The tragedies that extremist Islamist movements have caused
to Arabs and Muslims are more than the deaths and tragedies that Israel caused
the Palestinians and the Arabs in the three wars it fought with them,” he
added.
Ould Abdel Aziz worked on countering the funding by Turkey
and Qatar to finance the political arm of the Brotherhood in Mauritania. A
report issued by the Portal Center indicated that Qatari and Turkish attempts
to intervene in Mauritania aim to destabilize the country by financing centers
accused of promoting takfiri ideology, as well as establishing entities under
the guise of charities, with the aim of infiltrating Mauritanian society.
The former president took means to curb the Brotherhood’s
influence, including a decision to close the Future for Dawa, Culture and
Education Association that was established in 2008, which the Brotherhood had
used to achieve its political interests in the country.
At the end of last month, the authorities also withdrew a
license that they had granted to Abdullah Yassin University, which is dominated
by Tawassoul, and will perhaps ban the group’s activities as well.
In January, the Arab African Center for Development in
Mauritania organized a seminar entitled “Foreign Interventions in the Arab
World: Turkish Intervention in Libya as a Model”, in which a large number of
media professionals and jurists participated. This came in conjunction with the
launch of the activities of the Peace in Libya summit organized in Berlin,
Germany.
The participants criticized Turkey's interventions in the
Arab region, especially its military interference in Libya, emphasizing that Ankara’s
activities destabilize security and stability and reflect its expansionist
ambitions in Africa.
During the seminar, Ahmed Salem Ould Dah, director of the
center and the Mauritanian Journalists Syndicate, called on Libyans to counter
these intentions, to sit at the dialogue table, and to reject division in order
to block the path of foreign powers in the Arab world.
For his part, Mauritanian writer and political analyst
Mustafa Mohammed al-Mukhtar said that the Brotherhood does not place any weight
or value for their homeland, but instead serves the interests of the Brotherhood
and helps fulfill its agendas, pointing to the danger of the media arms that
justify Turkey’s military interference in Libya. He added that the minds of
many youth and the emerging generations have been kidnapped.



