How the Muslim Brotherhood use charity associations and NGO’s
NGOs and community associations are considered one
of the most important pillars on which the Muslim Brotherhood has depended since
its foundation in 1920s until the overthrow of Mohamed Morsi on 3 July 2013.
These associations played a key role in recruiting the
new elements of the group and used also the mobilization in the election
process conducted by the Muslim Brotherhood, either at the level of local
elections, parliamentary or presidential.
The group has been able to consolidate through these
associations, which were located mainly in the regions and the poor areas, with
more than 1,000 charitable societies distributed country wide.
So the Muslim Brotherhood was able to employ NGOs and
community associations to serve its political objectives, based on three main
roles: the preaching works, social and charitable role, as well as the
political role, which is widely manifested during the periods of the various
elections.
First: Missions of the
Brotherhood as-related with NGOs and
community associations
1. Preaching works of the Brotherhood-related
NGOs and community associations: these
associations have had the major role in spreading the group’s ideas and
ideology under the umbrella of proselytizing (preaching
- Da'wah).
The Da'wah has taken place through these
associations-linked to mosques. Da’wah is expected to be a tool of the social
growth of the new generation of the youth Brotherhood members. In the mosques
the group forces its members to listen to religion lectures and read holy Quran
as well as other activities.
2. Social and Charitable Role: The NGOs and community associations related to the Brotherhood
exploited the neediness and poverty of a lot of people to provide some services
as well as building clinics, schools, projects for the hard living women, in
addition to pay money and annual pilgrimage for some people.
The Brotherhood misuse these activities and
practices to take the role of the state and the government. This role helped
the group to influence in these Low-class people. The social role of the Muslim
Brotherhood's associations has expanded to include high-classes by establishing
investment hospitals and international schools.
3. The political Role of
the NGOs and community associations is the strategic reason behind establishing
such these associations. As the Proselytizing, Social
and Charitable Roles is just the group’s tactic to gain
more popularity and get closer to the grassroots in order to win the votes in
the various elections, which was achieved widely in the parliamentary elections
2011 and the 2012 presidential elections.
Ministry of Social Solidarity in Egypt announced in
the end of 2015, that it closed more than 1000 Brotherhood-linked associations;
this confirms the growing social network of the Muslim Brotherhood with
hundreds of charitable associations.
Ansar Al-sonna one of these associations belonged to
the Brotherhood, has more than 200 branches around the country with 1750
mosques, 203 Quran schools, 31 preaching institutions, 27 hospitals, 3 schools
and elderly
Care.
The official authorities took several decisions that
resulted in the prohibition of associations belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood.
The first decision was the statement of the Cairo Court on September 23, 2013 which
banned all activities of the Muslim Brotherhood, confiscating its funds. This
was followed by a decision to ban the associations of the group and the
reservation of all its funds. The Minister of Social Solidarity, Ghada Wali,
indicated that it was decided that the funds and propertiest of the societies
would be transferred to the Fund of the community associations.
It can be argued that a number of incentives have
led the state to take decisions to ban the group in general and to ban its NGOs
in particular:
Second, motivations of banning
the Brotherhood and its NGOs
· The
removal of the group from public work
· Preventing
the Brotherhood from funding violence
· Drying
up the financial resources of the group
· Cutting
the links between the group and the needy
After the state begins to reduce the role of these
charities associations there are many questions must be answered, including the
mechanisms of social compensation of those associations.