Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Islam - Current Day > Turkey still trying to convert Christian buildings to Muslim; Muslims destroy church-build in Indonesia; Radical French Muslim; Abayas outlawed in French schools; Libyan minister fired for talking to Israeli

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Cyprus: Turkish Islamic groups plan to turn historic

12th-century monastery into a mosque


AUG 27, 2023 9:00 AM BY ROBERT SPENCER

The practice of appropriating the sacred sites of other religious traditions and converting them to mosques, or destroying the non-Muslim buildings and constructing a mosque on the same site, has abundant precedent worldwide. Consider Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, the Church of St. John the Baptist/Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, thousands of mosques built over destroyed Hindu temples in India, and the Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The idea in every case, including this one, is to declare the victory and supremacy of Islam, and to show how Islam has prevailed over other religions.

In the link above (Hagia Sophia),  I propose the possibility that Turkey's Erdogan might be the Abomination of Desolation after he prayed Islamic prayers in the longest-standing Christian church in history. 




Cyprus: Outrage Over Turkish Plans To Turn Historic Monastery Into Mosque


by Thomas O’Reilly, The European Conservative, August 20, 2023:

Plans to partially convert a historic Cypriot monastery into a mosque have incurred the wrath of ecclesiastical authorities and Cypriot nationalists, as authorities in the Turkish-occupied north of the country temporarily shelved the idea following a very public backlash.


An announcement late last month of a proposal by local Islamic groups to build a Muslim prayer centre (masjid) on the grounds of the Apostolos Andreas Monastery sparked national outrage as officials in the south of the island said it was “unthinkable” that the plans could go ahead.

The twelfth-century Apostolos Andreas Monastery—associated with St. Andrew the Apostle, despite being located in the Turkish-occupied north-eastern quadrant of the island—has been compared to the “Lourdes of Cyprus” by many historians and is a site of paramount religious importance to the island’s Orthodox Christian community….

A local bishop has condemned plans to build a permanent Islamic prayer centre on the grounds of the monastery, which is currently undergoing restoration work. According to the bishop, Turkish officials have already moved Islamic prayer mats into the monastery without consulting with monks and are preparing for the long-term construction of a mosque on site.

The move has stirred up very recent historical memories on the island, where an estimated 550 Greek Orthodox monasteries, churches, and chapels were desecrated following the Turkish invasion, with many Christians forced to flee the northern half of the island for fear of persecution….

The matter of Apostolos Andreas Monastery was raised in the European Parliament by socialist MEPs Giorgos Georgiou and Niyazi Kizilyürek, who linked the move to direct Turkish financial backing and asked the Commission what steps it would take to protect Cyprus’s Christian heritage….

Why would they expect the European Parliament to do anything when they have done their best to destroy Christianity in Europe in favour of Islam?




Indonesia: Muslim mob destroys church constructed in Muslim-majority area


AUG 27, 2023 1:00 PM BY ROBERT SPENCER

Islamic law forbids the construction of new churches. Christians are “forbidden to ring church bells or display crosses, recite the Torah or Evangel aloud, or make public display of their funerals and feastdays, and are forbidden to build new churches” – Reliance of the Traveller o.11.5 (6,7)




Mob Damages Church Building in Indonesia




08//24/2023 Indonesia (International Christian Concern)The Pentecostal Missionary Church in Kabil Village, Indonesia, was recently destroyed by a radical mob that was protesting its construction in a majority-Muslim area.

Church Pastor Jacksean Napitupulu estimated that a mob of about 30 people caused considerable damage to the newly constructed building. Local residents had complained about the church and questioned the legality of its building permit over the past three years.

In Muslim-majority Indonesia, it is common for non-Muslims to face obstacles as they seek church building permits from the local government. Even if pastors succeed in getting permits, authorities often give in to hardline groups’ protests and demands that stops construction….

Kabil Village, Indonesia



France: Man converts to Islam, praises jihad and Sharia,

plots jihad attack, ‘God called me to bring people to him’


AUG 27, 2023 12:00 PM BY ROBERT SPENCER

Yet another convert to Islam somehow gets the idea that his new, peaceful religion calls for him to do violence to those outside the fold. No authority on earth has ever shown any interest in studying this recurring phenomenon, or considering its implications.

===========================

Yvelines: the worker wanted to commit an attack on July 24


Translated from “Yvelines : l’ouvrier voulait commettre un attentat le 24 juillet,” 
by François Desserre, Actu, August 25, 2023


His long, light brown hair falls over his black polo shirt. Often, he tweaks his little goatee with his fingers. In the box of the Versailles judicial court, this Friday August 25, 2023, Mézian has more the look of a surfer than a terrorist.

And yet, this 25-year-old resident of Noisy-le-Roi (Yvelines) must be tried for justifying an act of terrorism and an attempt to acquire a handgun. According to the investigation, he even planned to carry out “a project.”


Mézian, who converted to Islam at a young age, was targeted by the Versailles criminal investigation department following his postings on Snapchat and Tik Tok. Videos in which he praises jihad and takes very extreme positions. In them, he praises the values of Sharia law as “a necessity.” In them, he describes his idea of an infidel, “a human being who rejects the truth.”

In Noisy-le-Roi, a community of 7,600 inhabitants, Mézian is no stranger. He walks around in a djellaba. He also attracts young people to him. In exchange for sweets or money, he teaches them prayers and the codes of Islam. In the woods, he confirms to them that they will be “the next generation of fighters.”

On July 11, he goes on the Darknet, where he tries to buy his first handgun, a Colt 45. He gets scammed out of 500 euros. He returned there quickly, on July 15, to acquire another, a 7.65 pistol.” Must wait. There was “a lot of demand during the riots,” his contact tells him.

At the same time, the investigators learn from his former fellow prisoner from Condé-sur-Sarthe (Orne – dep. 61) that he has already spoken of a criminal “project.” The man has never hidden his radicalism, which has become more powerful after seven years in prison. Seven years for gang rape committed when he was a minor.

No doubt, he felt justified since Mohammed approved of such behaviour in the Quran.

He went through the Radicalization Support District (QPR). He read a lot of history, astrophysics and religious books.

The profile of the man is disturbing. The criminal brigade of the judicial police of Versailles decides to arrest him. Especially since Mézian spoke of a date: July 24. But not of a place. Because, according to him, “it is a key date when the Freemasons were against the armies of the Prophet.”

Before being remanded in custody, he wrote a 6-page letter to the judge. The fine, tight, slanted writing is very calligraphic. It begins with a large drop cap.

In his sentences, he explains his vision of “radicality which is not dangerousness. It allows me to channel myself. He also explains that jihad is a purification and that “the only master I serve is God and his messenger.”

Proselytism? “I don’t do more than that. God called me to bring people to him.”

Faced with his judges, Mézian contests any planned attack. He confirms his withdrawal and a “certain confinement,” after his passage in QPR, where he could be fully searched seven times an hour.

“When I was released, I felt confused, attacked from the outside, by the influx of information.”

To the accusations of an attack, he responds with the madness of his informer. “Me, I just want to make my life, to work. There, I am a temporary worker on a construction site at the King’s Stables, in Versailles.”

For the public prosecutor, all this takes on a more than unpleasant hue.

“The explanations he gives, he is the only one to understand them. Me, I see that he publishes videos where he shows the fighters as heroes. He says these videos fuel his faith. He says he was vaccinated against yellow fever to go on a spiritual retreat in Mali. It is not a trivial destination. One of his friends says he is a diehard, ready to fall as a martyr. Without forgetting the writings found at his home, the attempts to buy a weapon… He is a lone and dangerous wolf.”

And the magistrate continued: “In a country like ours and a department like Yvelines, hard hit by terrorism (Magnanville in 2016, Conflans-Sainte-Honorine in 2020 and Rambouillet in 2021), it is not understandable, nor acceptable.”

In this context, the prosecution pronounces heavy requisitions, up to 7 years of detention, a socio-judicial follow-up for 10 years, a ban on going to the Yvelines for 10 years and to hold a weapon for the same period.

For his last words of defense, Mézian puts it in his own words.

“Pragmatism would like me to be released because the reintegration is there. The radicalism with which you characterize me is something that stabilizes me, which generates satisfaction. I do this with good intentions. I have faith in the Lord you have denied. But I want the best for people like you. I call people to the truth for their good. I am not someone who wants to shed blood.”

The sentence was pronounced, following to the letter the requests of the public prosecutor.

Without a word, Mézian was handcuffed and taken back to jail.

He has ten days to appeal the decision.




French education minister announces ban on Islamic abayas in schools


French authorities are to ban the wearing in school of abaya dresses worn by some Muslim women, the education minister said Sunday, arguing the garment violated France's strict secular laws in education.

France's Education and Youth Minister Gabriel Attal delivers a speech during a meeting of rectors at the Sorbonne University in Paris on August 24, 2023. © Emmanuel Dunand, AFP

"It will no longer be possible to wear an abaya at school," Education Minister Gabriel Attal told TF1 television, saying he would give "clear rules at the national level" to school heads ahead of the return to classes nationwide from September 4.

The move comes after months of debate over the wearing of abayas in French schools, where women have long been banned from wearing the Islamic headscarf.

The right and far-right had pushed for the ban, which the left argued would encroach on civil liberties. 

There have been reports of abayas being increasingly worn in schools and tensions within school over the issue between teachers and parents.

"Secularism means the freedom to emancipate oneself through school," Attal said, describing the abaya as "a religious gesture, aimed at testing the resistance of the republic toward the secular sanctuary that school must constitute.

"You enter a classroom, you must not be able to identify the religion of the students by looking at them," he said.

A law of March 2004 banned "the wearing of signs or outfits by which students ostensibly show a religious affiliation" in schools.

This includes large crosses, Jewish kippas and Islamic headscarves.

Unlike headscarves, abayas -- a long, baggy garment worn to comply with Islamic beliefs on modest dress -- occupied a grey area and had faced no outright ban until now.

But the education ministry had already issued a circular on the issue in November last year.

It described the abaya as one of a group of items of clothing whose wearing could be banned if they were "worn in a manner as to openly display a religious affiliation". The circular put bandannas and long skirts in the same category.

Mixed reaction 

Approached by head teachers' unions about the issue, Attal's predecessor as education minister Pap Ndiaye replied that he did not want "to publish endless catalogues to specify the lengths of dresses".

At least one union leader, Bruno Bobkiewicz, welcomed Attal's announcement Sunday.

"The instructions were not clear, now they are and we welcome it," said Bobkiewicz, general secretary of the NPDEN-UNSA, which represents head teachers.

Eric Ciotto, head of the opposition right-wing Republicans party, also welcomed the news. 

"We called for the ban on abayas in our schools several times," he said. 

But Clementine Autain of the left-wing opposition France Unbowed party denounced what she described as the "policing of clothing".

Attal's announcement was "unconstitutional" and against the founding principles of France's secular values, she argued -- and symptomatic of the government's "obsessive rejection of Muslims".

Barely back from the summer break, she said, President Emmanuel Macron's administration was already trying to compete with Marine Le Pen's far-right National Rally. 

The CFCM, a national body encompassing many Muslim associations, has said items of clothing alone are not "a religious sign".

The announcement is the first major move by Attal, 34, since he was promoted this summer to handle the hugely contentious education portfolio.

Along with Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin, 40, he is seen as a rising star who could potentially play an important role after Macron steps down in 2027.

(AFP)



Libya sacks foreign minister over ‘unofficial encounter’

with Israeli counterpart

Libya's internationally recognised prime minister has sacked his top diplomat after she met her Israeli counterpart, with news of the encounter triggering protests in a country that does not recognise Israel.

Modified: 28/08/2023 - 21:54, 3 min

Libyan Foreign Minister Najla al-Mangoush speaks during a press conference with her Turkish counterpart at the ministry of foreign affairs in Ankara on February 13, 2023. © Adem Altan, AFP

Oil-rich Libya, which plunged into chaos after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was toppled and killed in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, has been divided since 2014 between the UN-supported government of Prime Minister Abdelhamid Dbeibah in Tripoli and a rival administration based in the country's east.

Analysts who spoke to AFP appeared to agree that Najla al-Mangoush was the "fall person" for decisions made by Libya's rival leaders, and linked the meeting with United States efforts to pressure more Arab countries to normalise ties with Israel.

Al-Ahrar private news channel, citing a government source, said Mangoush had been fired following a meeting last week in Rome with Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen.

The Palestinian embassy in Tripoli also reported her dismissal, saying it had been announced by Dbeibah during a visit Monday to the mission. Dbeibah also declared "his rejection of normalisation with Israel" and Libya's total support for the Palestinian people, the embassy said.

In the east, Libyan lawmakers demanded an investigation into the meeting at a special session during which they wore the chequered black-and-white Palestinian scarf.

The Mangoush-Cohen meeting sparked protests Sunday night in Tripoli and other cities, when demonstrators blocked roads with burning tyres and waved Palestinian flags.

Before visiting the Palestinian embassy, Dbeibah's government said Mangoush had been "provisionally suspended and subject to an 'administrative investigation'", while in Israel Cohen confirmed the meeting took place.

Mangoush's whereabouts were uncertain on Monday, following social media reports she had flown to Turkey as protests flared.

Libya's Internal Security Agency (ISA) said she had not been authorised to leave the country and was on a "travel ban list" awaiting investigation.

Turkey's Anadolu news agency, citing security sources, said Mangoush had already left for Istanbul following the diplomatic furore.

The Libyan foreign ministry, in a statement, defended the meeting with Cohen as a "chance and unofficial encounter".

Mangoush had reiterated "in a clear and unambiguous manner Libya's position regarding the Palestinian cause", it said, accusing Israel of trying to "present this incident" as a "meeting or talks".

'Scapegoating'

Libya expert Anas El Gomati of the Sadeq Institute said that Dbeibah, his rival military strongman Khalifa Haftar and the eastern-based parliament that backs him, all knew about the meeting.

They "have used Libya's first female foreign minister as the fall person for decisions they all partook in," Gomati said.

"It's not about politics. It's blatant scapegoating," he told AFP.

Fellow analyst Jalel Harchaoui agreed Dbeibah's survival is at stake and the meeting was spurred by "pressure" on Libya from both the United Nations and the United States to push ahead with much-delayed presidential and legislative elections.

According to Harchaoui, Dbeibah "tried to play at diplomacy but failed because he did not evaluate correctly" the response of Libyans opposed to ties with Israel.

"There are talks to create a new interim government between the Dbeibah and Haftar families brokered in Abu Dhabi instead of holding elections," said Gomati.

"There has been pressure to join the Abraham Accords and begin the process as a gesture to bolster the deal, which would increase US support," he said, adding: "Tel Aviv's backing of Haftar is no secret."

Israel has normalised ties with some Arab countries, including the United Arab Emirates, under US-backed deals reached in 2020 and known as the Abraham Accords.



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