Brotherhood's ‘Collective Against Islamophobia’ moves activities outside France
 
 
In a preemptive step, the Collective Against Islamophobia in
France (CCIF) announced that it had dissolved itself and moved its activities
outside the country. This step came after the association received a
notification from the authorities to move towards its dissolution.
The CCIF said on its website, “We decided to dissolve the
assembly in France and transfer our activities abroad.”
“The board of directors took the decision to voluntarily
dissolve the collective on October 29 and began transferring its activities to
partner organizations that are involved in combating Islamophobia at the
European level,” the statement continued.
“The Collective Against Islamophobia no longer exists in
France, and all means of communication will be closed within 24 hours,” it
said, adding, “After 24 hours, the Collective Against Islamophobia will not be
active except in efforts to liquidate its activities on French soil.”
Observers believe that the CCIF’s decision to dissolve
itself is an attempt to bow to the storm of European countries to confront
terrorism and extremism and to avoid the wave of governmental measures against
it in several European countries.
French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin announced Thursday,
November 20, that he had notified the security services concerned with
implementing the dissolution of the CCIF.
The day after the murder of teacher Samuel Paty in Paris,
Darmanin had accused the CCIF of being “an Islamist den working against the
republic.”
The minister explained in a tweet that CCIF officials “have
eight days to present their observations.”
The CCIF responded to the minister's notification at the
time, tweeting that the interior minister “by submitting to the calls of the
extreme right, sent a notification to the Collective Against Islamophobia in
France with a draft solution without a subject,” because the CCIF had
“transferred a large part of its activities abroad, as well as its social headquarters.”
“The collective will continue to provide legal support to
people who are victims of Islamophobia and will notify international bodies
about the development of the struggle against all kinds of discrimination and
for equality in France,” it said.
In the wake of the killing of a French teacher at the hands
of a young man of Chechen origin, the French authorities decided to dissolve
several associations on charges of engaging in suspicious activities, the most
recent of which was the Turkish Grey Wolves nationalist movement, against the
background of promoting hatred and committing acts of violence on French soil.
Likewise, the authorities accused the BarakaCity
organization of spreading ideas promoting extremism. The same applied to the
Sheikh Yassin group, which is linked to the Brotherhood, and the authorities
have arrested its founder pending an investigation on suspicion of his
involvement in terrorist attacks.
The French authorities also recently announced the closure
of 73 mosques, a private school and a commercial shop since the beginning of
this year, as part of “combating extremism.”
The French authorities say that their measures target
associations and mosques that receive foreign funding and engage in extremist
activities that are inconsistent with French values.
According to reports, the Collective Against Islamophobia is
one of the organizations close to the French Brotherhood.
Early last week, 22 French figures signed an open letter to
President Emmanuel Macron, the prime minister and the interior minister,
containing a major demand to ban what is known as the French Muslims
organization, which is close to the Brotherhood.
Most prominently, the letter, published by the Atlantico
website, was a warning against the Brotherhood and all other organizations
associated with it in France.
The letter warned of the hidden agenda of this organization,
which is working to create a parallel society within French territories with
the aim of destabilization.
The letter also affirmed the necessity to dissolve all
religious gatherings, societies, institutes and schools associated with the
French Muslims organization.
The signatories of the letter also demanded the necessity of
stopping foreign funding for the organizations associated with the French Muslims
organization, and it specifically mentioned Qatar as a major financier.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


