Andrew E. Harrod
Special to IPT News
http://www.investigativeproject.org/4201/germany-and-syria-a-case-study-in-jihad
The
"martyr death" is the "best way to die," Mustafa's "wish…for every
believing brother and sister," declared the 24-year old Moroccan-German
in an Oct. 18 interview for the German public television station ZDF ("Minderjährige Deutsche im Krieg"
segment). Having recently returned from Syria, Mustafa is one more
manifestation of what he calls the "very clear matter" of "armed
struggle" in Islam worrying German authorities in light of Syria's
ongoing Islamist-dominated insurgency.
Two days after Mustafa's television appearance, Germany's leading newsmagazine Der Spiegel reported
that 200 jihadists had left Germany to fight against Syria's Bashar
al-Assad regime. These jihadists had formed a "German Camp" in northern
Syria for the establishment of German-speaking fighting units, according
to Germany's domestic security service, the Federal Office for the
Protection of the Constitution (Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz
or BfV). More than half of these jihadists are German citizens, BfV
estimated; although an estimated 80-85 percent of these fighters had a
"migrant background," while the rest were German converts, according to a German radio interview.
Eight of these German jihadists had already died fighting in Syria, now
"by far the most 'attractive' jihad theater of war" for Islamists
globally, in BfV's view. German officials estimate that there are now
about 1,000 European jihadists in Syria, with 120 from Belgium and 150
from Kosovo.
Such European jihadists did not just present problems for Syria, BfV President Hans-Georg Maaßen analyzed in a Sept. 22 interview.
Speaking then of 170 German jihadists entering the Syrian insurgency,
Maaßen described this number as having "clearly increased" from 120 a
few months before. These peoples were among a "very high personnel
potential of Islamists in Germany, 42,000 persons." Jihad recruitment
among these German residents for Syria filled the BfV "with great
concern," because "these persons will presumably come back again." If
they do, these jihadists "will probably have combat experience, they
will perhaps even have a mission, a terrorist mission."
Mustafa indicated as much about himself, although he stressed having
personally been concerned "above all" about delivering "humanitarian
help" in Syria. Yet Mustafa reported his Muslim acquaintances in Syria
are extremely angry about the lack of German and other Western support
for the anti-Assad revolt. Accordingly, "one should not later be
surprised if something should happen in the Federal Republic of
Germany."
Maaßen also recounted having "always feared that Germany can become a
rest, financing, and recruiting area for foreign terrorist
organizations." Germany's role in al-Qaida's Sept. 11, 2001, attacks had
already foreshadowed such exploitation. Maaßen discussed fundraising in
Germany on behalf of various terrorist organizations in Chechnya,
Turkey, or now Syria. Money or material donated in Germany would then
find its way to destinations such as Syria through "ant traffic" in
individual personal trips.
"Charity events" featuring "prominent Salafist speakers" along with
corresponding bank accounts were a particular German income source for
Syria's jihadists described by Maaßen. A Dec. 16 event in Dortmund, for example, featured the Palestinian-born Ibrahim Abou-Nagie saying of Syrian Muslims that "today it is their turn, tomorrow ours."
"Whoever arms a warrior of God, receives the same reward," Abou-Nagie
added. "And all our siblings in Syria are warriors of God. And whoever
donates here, he arms a warrior of God."
The legend that this collected money served "humanitarian goals" made
legal countermeasures difficult. Yet BfV officials regularly determine
that these donations serve jihadists in Syria. Provincial BfV officials
in North Rhine-Westphalia, for example, had discovered bullet proof vests and night vision goggles amongst humanitarian supplies bound for Syria.
In particular the organization Helfen in Not (Helping in Need or HN) topped BfV's list of suspicious entities calling for Syrian relief. HN, for example, raised suspicions with a July 2012 delivery of used ambulances to Syria,
vehicles used there not just for emergency care but also vehicle-borne
suicide bombings. HN also organized a "charity" event with over 500
participants at a Turkish culture club in a Cologne suburb on Oct, 3.
Helping organize the Cologne event was Karim Lakhal, spokesperson for the Muslim Council in nearby Bonn (Rat der Muslime in Bonn).
Founded in 2006 with nine mosques and three Muslim organizations to
represent Bonn's 29,000 Muslims, the council's reputation as a
mainstream Muslim organization suffered from revelations beyond Lakhal.
Becoming public simultaneously with the HN event were police investigations
into the role of individual council members during a violent May 5,
2012, Bonn protest inflicting life-threatening injuries upon two police
officers.
Media investigations also revealed that three of five individuals
suggested by the council at the end of 2012 to provide chaplain services
for juvenile delinquents incarcerated in a Bonn area prison were known
Salafists. The council's project leader for this chaplaincy, moreover,
was a German Muslim convert known to police for violations of explosives
laws and for indoctrinating youth to join terrorist training camps.
Officials rejected the council's offer.
German aid workers' experiences in Syria further call into question
HN's motives. Three coworkers of the German Muslim-Christian relief
organization Grünhelme (Green Helmets) were victims of a kidnapping on May 15 in the north Syrian town of Harem. Two of the three escaped to Turkey on July 5, the third on Sept. 3.
The kidnappers spoke "truly accent-free German, that is to say, like a German," ", who escaped in July, told a television interviewer.
The captors, meanwhile, told Blechschmidt and his companions that "they
would probably be killed." Because "bullets in Syria are too
expensive," he said, "a knife would probably be used and our throats
slit."
This was not Blechschmidt's first encounter with his native tongue in
Syria. In May, a German-speaking man armed with a holstered knife
visited a hospital Blechschmidt was building in the city of Azaz. As an
Internet video of the episode posted by Salafists showed, the visitor
demanded to see Blechschmidt's passport. A voice on the video identified
the intruder who also filmed the video as Sabri Ben Abda, a German
Salafist previously spotted by reporters at German HN event. The infidel
"Kuffar are already bringing their people here," Abda complains in
German later in the video, so that the "Muslims will later be inoculated
for democracy."
"It is entirely clear" that HN "went to Syria in order to make life there hell for all like us," Grünhelme's director Rupert Neudeck
declared in seconding Blechschmidt's suspicions. "If we as a state are
not able," Neudeck adds about HN, "to stop their work, here at home and
also in Syria, then we are a dishrag state." Prosecutors in Cologne are
currently investigating HN's involvement in the kidnapping.
HN denies any involvement in the abduction, while admitting that Abda was once an amateur cameraman for HN. In contrast, HN's chairman Bekir Astürk has threatened Neudeck with legal action for his accusations. In Harem where Grünhelme was building a hospital, meanwhile, HN is now building a Koran school. Irrespective of HN's innocence in the Grünhelme
affair, it is easy to see why Maaßen saw his "main threat at the moment
definitely in the Islamic realm of Islamist extremism and terrorism."
No comments:
Post a Comment