Issued by CEMO Center - Paris
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Abdel Rahim Ali to address French Parliament tomorrow on dangers of funding terrorism

Monday 21/May/2018 - 02:09 PM
The Reference
طباعة

MP Abdel Rahim Ali, Chairman of the Center for Middle East Studies in Paris (CEMO), will address the French Parliament tomorrow morning on the post-Daesh terrorism, the dangers of radicalism exported to Europe and the Muslim Brotherhood's role in paving the way for this stage.

Members of the defense, national security and international affairs at the French parliament, in addition to a number of journalists and experts on terrorism, led by Roland Jacquard, Richard Labévière, Ian Hamel, Georges Malbrunot, Christian Chesnot  and media anchor Christian Malard  will attend the meeting.

MP Ali will deliver a speech on the beginning of terrorist groups in the 1980s, and the expansion of terrorists from Afghanistan to the Middle East, then Daesh and the defeat in Iraq and Syria.

He will tackle the Daesh returnees to Europe and the plans to form new groups in Europe. He will warn of measures and conduct in the West that may give a kiss of life to all of the extremist organizations such as the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Daesh, Hezbollah and al-Qaeda, citing a decision by US President Donald Trump to relocate the US embassy to Jerusalem, and calls of some French intellectuals to delete some verses in the holy Qur'an.

Moreover, he warns of European cooperation with organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood and countries such as Qatar and Turkey, which are seeking to seed terror in Europe.

In his address, MP Ali will warn of allowing the Muslim Brotherhood or its international organization to set up feeding entities such as Federation of Islamic Organizations, which affiliate more than 500 organizations of funding worth €6 billion.

MP Ali addressed a forum of the French Senate in December on the Muslim Brotherhood's vague concept of state and the future of its international organization. The forum was attended by representatives of political parties, heads of blocs at the French parliament, in addition to representatives of the French, European and Arab media, who all opened fire on Qatar-backed terrorism which destabilizes a number of Arab and European institutions.

The forum touched on the Muslim Brotherhood's role and its backing countries like Qatar in destabilizing a number of countries as well as implicitly attempting to impact the Western societies. 

The attendees then called for an investigation into Qatar's inciting role financing terror in the Middle East and Europe, as well as banning Qatari officials from entering France.      

         

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