Terrorist financing networks threaten Europe’s security

Terrorist financing networks operating from Europe represent a threat to the security and stability of the region, as their effects are not limited to the continuation of violence in areas where extremism is geographically concentrated, but they also attract new elements that subsequently form a crowded file of returnees.
Terrorist financing networks play a suspicious role in
financial corruption in European Union countries, as they give way to money
laundering and illegal trade and threaten the economic market by exploiting
modern technological tools to transfer suspicious money to extremist networks
in various conflict hotpots.
Terrorist financing networks
The disclosure of terrorist financing networks has escalated
recently, revealing their multiplicity and ramification, as well as their
strategy of concentrating in major countries in Europe. In April 2021, the
German authorities announced the arrest of an Iraqi immigrant on charges of
transferring thousands of dollars to ISIS in Syria and Lebanon.
The authorities noted that the migrant, Ayman, had
transferred about $12,000 of suspicious money to ISIS elements during the
period from June to September 2020. The security services confirm that these
funds were used to support ISIS camps in Syria to secure the needs of women and
urge them to remain in the ranks of the terrorist organization, while the money
sent to Lebanon aimed to liberate detained elements and return them to fighting.
The investigations added that Ayman is an Iraqi immigrant
who arrived in the country in 2016 during the waves of immigration that swept
through Europe from the Middle East as a result of the fall of Iraq and Syria
to the grip of ISIS. He was arrested in January 2021 at the border between
Germany and Switzerland while trying to escape to join the ranks of the
terrorist organization.
The information pointed out that Ayman had wanted to join
ISIS shortly after his arrival in Germany. He tried to persuade ISIS leaders to
allow him to move to Syria and fight among their ranks, but they chose to
employ him in the task of collecting and financing terrorism by sending dollars
from Germany, so he lived in Berlin for a period of time to deliver money.
Transferring money from Germany
The continuous waves of immigration from the Middle East to
Europe allows ISIS to exploit these waves to infiltrate terrorist elements into
Europe to carry out various tasks, most notably creating new sources of funding
for the organization.
These elements are likely to play a more dangerous role in
recruiting European youth to join the organization and adopt its extremist
ideas, especially with these areas embracing religious and cultural centers in
support of fundamentalist ideology, which appears in the Brotherhood entities
that represent the main source of literature for modern terrorist groups.
Germany, in particular, suffers from the spread of Hizb ut-Tahrir on its soil
despite a previous ban on its activities, and the party founded by Taqi al-Din
al-Nabhani adopts the same Brotherhood ideas, which represents a danger in
forming malicious intellectual outposts inside the midst of a package of
constitutional freedoms and rights laws that are exploited by these groups.
On April 27, France accused seven people on charges of
forming a network to finance terrorism in Syria, and the ages of those arrested
range from 28 to 48 years old. In 2020, France announced a major network that
would employ its members to finance terrorism in Syria and Iraq, particularly
camp funding, during an expanded security campaign adopted by Paris to dry up
terror sources on its soil.