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Showing posts with label Wahabism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wahabism. Show all posts

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Saudi Arabia is Destabilizing the World

This is a brilliant essay by a Senior Fellow at Brown U.
If you have been reading this blog for some time you may know that I have been saying that Islam progresses to become more Sharia-like over time and with increasing percentages of populations.
Stephen Kinzer explains why and how that happens,
and how the west blissfully ignores it.

Indonesian Muslims perform an evening prayer called 'tarawih' marking the first eve of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, at Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday, May 26, 2017. During Ramadan, the holiest month in Islamic calendar, Muslims refrain from eating, drinking, smoking and sex from dawn to dusk. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)

TATAN SYUFLANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Indonesian Muslims at Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta on May 26. Saudi Arabia has been working to pull Indonesia away from moderate Islam.

By Stephen Kinzer   

JUST A FEW months ago, the governor of Indonesia’s largest city, Jakarta, seemed headed for easy re-election despite the fact that he is a Christian in a mostly Muslim country. Suddenly everything went violently wrong. Using the pretext of an offhand remark the governor made about the Koran, masses of enraged Muslims took to the streets to denounce him. In short order he lost the election, was arrested, charged with blasphemy, and sentenced to two years in prison.

This episode is especially alarming because Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim country, has long been one of its most tolerant. Indonesian Islam, like most belief systems on that vast archipelago, is syncretic, gentle, and open-minded. The stunning fall of Jakarta’s governor reflects the opposite: intolerance, sectarian hatred, and contempt for democracy. Fundamentalism is surging in Indonesia. This did not happen naturally.


Saudi Arabia has been working for decades to pull Indonesia away from moderate Islam and toward the austere Wahhabi form that is state religion in Saudi Arabia. The Saudis’ campaign has been patient, multi-faceted, and lavishly financed. It mirrors others they have waged in Muslim countries across Asia and Africa.

Successive American presidents have assured us that Saudi Arabia is our friend and wishes us well. Yet we know that Osama bin Laden and most of his 9/11 hijackers were Saudis, and that, as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton wrote in a diplomatic cable eight years ago, “Donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide.”

“Donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide.”
Hillary Clinton (as Secretary of State)


Recent events in Indonesia shine a light on a Saudi project that is even more pernicious than financing terrorists. Saudi Arabia has used its wealth, much of which comes from the United States, to turn entire nations into hotbeds of radical Islam. By refusing to protest or even officially acknowledge this far-reaching project, we finance our own assassins — and global terror.

The center of Saudi Arabia’s campaign to convert Indonesians to Wahhabi Islam is a tuition-free university in Jakarta known by the acronym LIPIA. All instruction is in Arabic, given mainly by preachers from Saudi Arabia and nearby countries. Genders are kept apart; strict dress codes are enforced; and music, television, and “loud laughter” are forbidden. Students learn an ultra-conservative form of Islam that favors hand amputation for thieves, stoning for adulterers, and death for gays and blasphemers.



Many of the students come from the more than 100 boarding schools Saudi Arabia supports in Indonesia, or have attended one of the 150 mosques that Saudis have built there. The most promising are given scholarships to study in Saudi Arabia, from which they return fully prepared to wreak social, political, and religious havoc in their homeland. Some promote terror groups like Hamas Indonesia and the Islamic Defenders Front, which did not exist before the Saudis arrived.

Eager to press his advantage, King Salman of Saudi Arabia made a nine-day trip to Indonesia in March, accompanied by an entourage of 1,500. The Saudis agreed to allow more than 200,000 Indonesians to make the hajj pilgrimage to Mecca each year — more than come from any other country — and sought permission to open new branches of their LIPIA university. Some Indonesians are pushing back against the Saudi assault on their traditional values, but it is difficult to deny permission for new religious schools when the state is not able to provide decent secular alternatives. In Indonesia, as in other countries where the Saudis are actively promoting Wahhabism — including Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bosnia — the weakness and corruption of central governments create pools of rootless unemployed who are easily seduced by the promises of free food and a place in God’s army.

It (Saudi Arabia) gives clerics large sums to promote
their anti-Western, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic brand
of religious militancy abroad


The surging fundamentalism that is transforming Indonesia teaches several lessons. First is one that we should already have learned, about the nature of the Saudi government. It is an absolute monarchy supported by one of the world’s most reactionary religious sects. It gives clerics large sums to promote their anti-Western, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic brand of religious militancy abroad. In exchange, the clerics refrain from criticizing the Saudi monarchy or its thousands of high-living princes. Saudis with close ties to the ruling family give crucial support to groups like Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and ISIS. This fact should be at the front of our minds whenever we consider our policy toward the Middle East — including when we decide whether to side with the Saudis in their new dispute with neighboring Qatar.

Saudi Arabia’s success in reshaping Indonesia shows the importance of the global battle over ideas. Many in Washington consider spending for cultural and other “soft power” projects to be wasteful. The Saudis feel differently. They pour money and resources into promoting their world view. We should do the same.



The third lesson that today’s Indonesia teaches is about the vulnerability of democracy. In 1998 Indonesia’s repressive military dictatorship gave way to a new system, based on free elections, that promised civil and political rights for all. Radical preachers who would previously have been imprisoned for whipping up religious hatred found themselves free spread their poison. Democracy enables them to forge giant mobs that demand death for apostates. Their political parties campaign in democratic elections for the right to come to power and crush democracy. This is a sobering reality for those who believe that one political system is best for all countries under all circumstances.

Their political parties campaign in democratic elections
for the right to come to power and crush democracy.

The Saudi campaign to radicalize global Islam also shows that earth-shaking events often happen slowly and quietly. The press, focused intently on reporting today’s news, often misses deeper and more important stories. Historians of journalism sometimes point to the northward “great migration” of African-Americans after World War II as an epochal story that few journalists noticed because it was a slow process rather than one-day news event.

The same is true of Saudi Arabia’s long campaign to pull the world’s 1.8 billion Muslims back to the 7th century. We barely notice it, but every day, from Mumbai to Manchester, we feel its effects.

Stephen Kinzer is a senior fellow at the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University. Follow him on Twitter @stephenkinzer.



Monday, March 20, 2017

Brussels District Hosts 51 NGOs with Suspected Terrorist Links – Report

© AFP

As many as 51 out of more than 1,600 non-profit organizations and activist groups registered in the mainly Muslim Molenbeek district of the Belgian capital have suspected links to terrorism, Belgium's De Morgen daily says, citing a confidential police report.

In most cases, the organizations were regarded by the police as having links to terrorism when they had a director, an employee or a volunteer suspected of some terrorism-related activities, De Morgen reports, citing a paper, which was drawn up a year since the Belgian Interior ministry has launched an anti-terrorist operation dubbed the Canal Plan.

The checks conducted in all 1,617 NGOs registered in Molenbeek also showed that 102 of them are allegedly involved in some criminal activities, while 93 ceased to exist due to inactivity and 344 will come to an end in the near future.

During the operation, police also compiled a list of terrorist suspects, including 72 people. The investigation showed that 26 of them left Belgium for Syria and Iraq to fight for the extremist groups while 46 suspects, including returnees, potential recruits and those who failed to travel to the Middle East, are now in Belgium.

The report also says that 20 terrorist suspects are now in prison while the rest, 26, are “closely monitored.” Meanwhile, the paper stresses that “de-radicalization” specialists were assigned to only five of the suspects returned from the Middle East.

At the same time, no one has left Belgium to join terrorist groups in Syria or Iraq over the past 12 months, it says, adding that one suspect attempted to do that but failed.

The Canal Plan was presented by the Belgian Interior Minister Jan Jambon in February 2016 and was aimed at enhancing control over the jihadist activities and fighting radicalism in eight specific municipalities: Saint-Gilles, Anderlecht, Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, Koekelberg, Vilvoorde, Schaerbeek and the Brussels City.

The plan envisaged spending € 39 million ($ 41.9 million) and deploying 300 additional police officers to “clean up” the troubled communities with specific attention being paid to Molenbeek, which was considered a “terrorist hotbed” after high-profile terrorist attacks in Paris in November 2015 and in Brussels in March 2016.

“We are going to clean up Molenbeek,” Jambon promised after the Paris attacks. Over the year since the launch of the operation, Belgian police have conducted door-to-door checks and searches in more than 8,600 houses and carried out ID checks on 22,668 Molenbeek residents – a quarter of the district population.

“Such checks took place before,” the local police chief, Johan De Becker told Belgian La Derniere Heure daily, adding that, “since the Canal Plan [operation has been launched], we check every new registration and every apartment in the same building and then conduct another check in a few weeks.”

According to the report, police also conducted 104 additional checks and monitored the activities of 6,168 people, 227 of whom were subsequently detained.

Meanwhile, the actions of the police provoked an angry reaction from Molenbeek NGOs as a number of them filed a complaint about “police brutality,” claiming that there were instances of “intimidation” and “harassment” during the police checks.

Ahmed El Khannouss, a member of the Humanist Democratic Centre Party and a local councilor, told De Morgen that “the methods used by police were controversial.” He also added that he sent a letter to Jambon, outlining his concerns.

In response, Jambon’s spokesman said that the Interior Ministry “wants to deal with the hotbeds of extremism” but stressed that “all such [actions] must go hand in hand with efforts [aimed at] winning the hearts of the young people [in the area].”

Molenbeek fell into disrepute after it was revealed that many terrorists, who were involved into the Paris and Brussels terrorist attacks, grew up and lived there.

Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the mastermind behind the Paris attacks, the Abdeslam brothers, who were involved in the terrorist attacks in the French capital, and Mohamed Abrini, who was also involved in the Brussels attacks, all resided in Molenbeek.

In early February, the Coordination Unit for Threat Analysis (OCAM), a special body that assesses the level of terrorist threat in Belgium, warned in its report that an increasing number of mosques and Islamic centers in Belgium are controlled by the Wahhabis while radical TV stations and online media operate freely and Wahhabi literature can be found in most Islamic bookshops.

At the very least, Wahabism needs to be completely removed from Europe, unless Europe wants Sharia Law to replace their own some day.

In November 2016, the Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders also warned the EU of an increasing influx of returning fighters who could carry out terrorist attacks in Europe.

Molenbeek, Brussels