Tawhid Berlin: New Turkish terrorism on German soil

German police have launched a wide-ranging campaign of raids in recent days against a Turkish association linked to ISIS, according to Reuters.
The German newspaper Bild stated that about 800 members of
the police’s special forces searched targets in the Märkisches Viertel, Neukölln,
Wedding and Tiergarten districts of Berlin.
Turkish associations in Germany
According to Bild, Turkish intelligence is active in Germany
behind groups of up to 15 Islamic societies registered in Germany operating
under the Turkish-Islamic Union for Religious Affairs (DITIB).
DITIB works according to the political Islamist agenda
associated with the Brotherhood and aims to Islamize society in Germany through
religious education in schools, domination of mosques and Islamic centers, and
support for Turkey's hidden policies against Germany and against the Turkish
opposition.
DITIB is the largest Muslim religious association in
Germany, operating 970 mosques in the German states and participating in
setting the curriculum of Islamic lessons in most German schools.
Bild confirmed that, during the past two years, the German
government has lifted support for all German Islamic associations after it became
clear to them that these associations supported terrorism in their country.
Tawhid Berlin group launches attacks
According to the German newspaper Der Spiegel, the Ministry
of the Interior in the state of Berlin directed strikes against the Tawhid Berlin
group after it was confirmed through evidence obtained from numerous
investigations that it was preparing to launch a series of terrorist operations
in Germany during the coming period.
In press statements to that newspaper, Berlin State Interior
Minister Andreas Geisel said that Tawhid Berlin called for armed jihad and
launching attacks against civilians, adding that Germany does not tolerate any
Islamist association that helps spread terrorism in the country.
According to Bild, after the Berlin attack in December 2016,
the German authorities intensified their monitoring of the extremist scene in
Germany and launched preemptive attacks against terrorist cells affiliated with
ISIS.
By the end of 2018, the authorities spotted a new channel on
Telegram under the name “Jama’at Berlin”. Later, a YouTube channel and a page
on Instagram with the same name appeared.
During this period, Abu Omar was the leader of the group,
meeting his followers periodically in his apartment in Berlin, giving lectures on
extremist ideas, and inciting his followers against the Germans.
Abu Omar was not new to the extremist scene in Germany, as
he had been known to the German authorities since 2015 and used to be present
in the Fussilet Mosque in Berlin, which was known as the “People of ISIS”
mosque.
According to a report by Germany’s domestic intelligence
agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), Abu
Omar and Tawhid Berlin categorically reject the democratic system and the rule
of law, describing parliaments as “invalid”.
After the killing of former ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,
Tawhid Berlin mourned him on their social media accounts.
The group has a membership of 20 people, and it has a
separate branch for women, whose leader works to spread extremism among women
and prepares some of them to marry male extremists, according to Bild.
The newspaper confirmed that one of the prominent members of
the group was known to the police and had a strong relationship with Anis Amri,
who carried out a suicide attack in Berlin in December 2016.