Ali gets to the roots of Erdogan's Brotherhood connections
Director of the Middle East Center for Studies in Paris (CEMO), Abdel Rahim Ali, revealed Friday that relations between the Muslim Brotherhood and Ankara dated back to the early 1960s, when Necmettin Erbakan, the godfather of the Muslim Brotherhood in Turkey, released the manifesto of founding the branch of the Islamist group in Turkey.
Erbakan, he said, called this manifesto "Milli
Gorus", Turkish for "national vision".
He added at a seminar by
CEMO in Paris, titled
"Turkish foreign policies and their disastrous consequences on
Europe", that in the manifesto, Erbakan demonstrated clear
influences from Sayyed Qotb, the theoretician of the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt.
"Soon after this,
Erbakan
founded a movement in Germany and gave it the same name," Ali said.
"In 1995, the
movement was called the Islamic Community of Milli Gorus," he added.
He noted that this
opened the door for the same movement to take root and grow throughout the whole
of Europe.
İt established
branches in the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Austria and the United Kingdom,
he said.
He added that the
movement owned and controlled hundreds of mosques in the same countries.
Ali noted that the
World Assembly of Muslim Youth, which is controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood,
organized its first youth camp in northern Cyprus in 1970.
Kamal al-Helbawi, a
member of the Egyptian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, was one of the senior
members of the assembly, Ali said.
He added that Helbawi,
who oversaw the camp, wrote a secret report about the camp, in which he
mentioned two Turkish youngmen.
"He described
them as potential leaders," Ali said. "These two youngmen were Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and Abdullah Gul," he added.
Attending the seminar
was a large host of researchers and experts. They included Ahmed Youssef Executive
Director of CEMO, Roland Lombardi, Joachim Veliocas, Pierre Berthelot, Garen
Shnorhokian. Several Middle East specialists from Europe also attended the
seminar, along with a large number of Arab and French journalists.