Clamp down: Belgium's policy to besiege and curb Brotherhood

To
increase the area of its terrorism in Europe, the Brotherhood is currently
trying to expand within Belgium, as the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs
warned on Sunday, March 7 of Brotherhood attempts to expand in Belgium after
the French government and security services subjected the group to security
restrictions.
According
to a report, Belgium is an important European station for extremist and
terrorist groups wishing to extend their influence, which was confirmed by a
study issued by the European Center for Counterterrorism and Intelligence
Studies, which said that Belgium is the only outlet for the Brotherhood after
the crackdown in France.
Brotherhood
incursion into Belgium
According
to the report, the Brotherhood's institutions in Belgium are represented by the
League of Muslims of Belgium (LMB), an active member of the Federation of
Islamic Organizations in Europe (FIOE), the European Forum of Muslim Women
(EFOMW), the Muslim Brotherhood's face, and the European Muslim Network (EMN),
which was founded in 2005 by Tariq Ramadan, the grandson of Brotherhood founder
Hassan al-Banna.
In
a report by The Guardian, the League of Muslims of Belgium is considered one of
the most important institutions of the Brotherhood there, as that association
was established in 1997 by Monsif Chatar and Karim Azzouzi.
Since
the founding of LMB, it has managed to control 10 mosques, and it also has
headquarters in five Belgian cities – the capital Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent,
Liege and Verviers – and it is run by a biology professor named Karim Chemlal,
who resides in Antwerp.
In
the same context, the LMB is a member of the Federation of Islamic
Organizations in Europe, which brings together Brotherhood organizations in
about 28 European countries.
The
Brotherhood has many branches in Belgium, especially charitable organizations
that are considered a window of Brotherhood extremism in Belgium.
The
Brotherhood’s presence in Belgium began after the immigration of a large number
of immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa.
The
Brotherhood’s branches were established in Belgium by Syrian Brotherhood member
Mohamed Hawari at the University of Brussels in the 1970s. With the passage of
several years, many associations and organizations were established, developing
until it included the establishment of a lobby there that had a great influence
on the course of religious orientations.
The
terrorist group was not satisfied with this extent, as they were able to form
partnerships with many non-Muslim entities, such as the Christian Democratic
Party and the Socialist Party in Brussels.
The
Brotherhood exploits these advocacy and charitable platforms to influence and
penetrate Belgian society, especially since many of these organizations are
close to the European organizations that spread there.
Perhaps
the thing that helped the Brotherhood to penetrate Belgium is that it is home
to the largest Muslim community in Europe, compared to its population of
approximately 1.5 million.
The
biggest crisis is the adoption of violent ideology by militant Islamist groups
seeking the Islamization of Belgian society and the establishment of an
Islamist state, to the extent that Belgian sociologist Felice Dassetto expected
in a study he conducted on the Islamic situation in his country that Muslims will
represent the majority of the population of Brussels by 2030.
Importance
of Belgium to terrorists
According
to the Washington Post, Belgium is one of the richest and most important
European countries geographically, because it enjoys a privileged location that
makes it the heart of Europe, as it is bordered on the eastern side by Germany
and Luxembourg, on the southern and southwestern sides by France, and on the
northern side by the Netherlands. It is also a founding member of the European
Union and hosts its headquarters.
Belgium
is also a member of many other major international organizations, such as the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and as such, it has an important
geostrategic position. Therefore, all terrorist organizations, headed by ISIS
and the Brotherhood, covet the country, where it is also easy for them to
launch terrorist attacks on neighboring countries, in particular France and
Germany.
Despite
all these advantages that Belgium enjoys, it ranks third on the list of danger
in the European Union and first in Europe with the number of its citizens
fighting alongside ISIS in Iraq and Syria. Numbers indicate that approximately
412 Belgians have gone in recent years to the fighting areas in Syria and Iraq,
and 30% of them returned to Belgium.
Belgium
also became a pathway and crossing point for extremists, through which
Europeans who wanted to join the ranks of ISIS crossed to Syria and Iraq.
Confronting
extremism and tightening the screws
Belgium
recently began to take several steps to confront extremism in its country,
especially the terrorism of the Brotherhood, as it expelled all affiliates of
the terrorist group.
According
to the Belgian newspaper Voetbalbelgie, the government also accused Turkey of
being the main financier of the Brotherhood in Belgium, so Brussels decided in
late 2017 to prevent 12 Turkish imams from entering the country due to Ankara’s
cooperation with the Brotherhood and for being members of the Brotherhood in
Turkey, as they are considered a national threat to Belgium.
This
was not the first time that the government in Belgium took measures against the
Brotherhood. In 2014, then-Interior Minister Jan Jambon decided to take a
package of measures against the Brotherhood's charitable organizations.