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Muslims in mosque near Geneva
The Swiss government has announced that several Islamic radical groups are operating in Switzerland, including Hamas. Swiss Muslims had an opportunity to say, "We will gladly cooperate with government anti-terror initiatives, as we are just as anxious as non-Muslim Swiss to root terror out of our midst." Instead they are complaining about the prospect of a "witch hunt." From Swissinfo via NZZ Online, with thanks to Nicolei and Alex:
Muslim leaders have expressed fears of a “witch-hunt” against the 300,000-strong community in Switzerland. Their alarm follows government revelations that members of half a dozen militant Islamic groups are operating secretly on Swiss soil.The Federal Refugee Office on Tuesday confirmed a report in “Le Temps” newspaper that these groups include the Tunisian Islamic Front; Hamas, the Palestinian militant Islamic group; and Algeria’s Islamic Salvation Front.
Spokesman Dominique Boillat told swissinfo his department was working closely with the Federal Police Office to monitor the situation.
“We are responsible for asylum seekers and if we suspect that people could be dangerous to the safety of this country then we have to signal this and they will then be placed under surveillance by the police,” he said.
“Sometimes these people have contacts with terrorist groups or they could be contacted here in Switzerland by terrorist groups and later used for arms trafficking.”
Police surveillance
News of a militant presence and police surveillance operations have prompted alarm among Switzerland’s Muslims that the community will now be hounded.
These fears were stoked in January this year when Swiss police arrested eight foreign nationals suspected of links to last May’s terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia.
Hafid Ouardiri, spokesman for Geneva’s Islamic Cultural Foundation, said he was “terrified” that people would mistakenly link Islam with extremism.
“This is beginning to become unbearable,” he said. “People are going to confuse a tiny minority with the great majority of Muslims.”
Similar concerns have been raised by British Muslims following a series of high-profile arrests related to alleged terrorism offences.
Nadia Karmous, the head of the cultural association of Muslim women in Switzerland, said she was astonished to hear that radical groups were active in the country.
“As far as we’re concerned, there is no rise in Islamism, but rather an increase in Islamophobia,” she said.
Witch-hunt
Boillat categorically denied that the authorities themselves were involved in any systematic targeting of Switzerland’s Muslims.
But he admitted that the government had become more sensitive to potential threats in the wake of the September 11 attacks in the United States.
“We would like to reassure the Muslim community that there is no witch-hunt by the authorities,” said Boillat.
“The impression the public is getting is that there is a real problem - which there isn’t. We are concerned about a very, very small number of people, and we have the means to control [them].”
Wrong message
Professor Reinhard Schulze, director of the Institute for Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Bern, said he believed the situation was being blown out of all proportion.
Schulze maintains that out of a Muslim population of around 300,000, there are only one or two extremists or “Jihadis” likely to be actively in contact with terrorist groups.
He says the majority of those being monitored by the Swiss authorities do not pose a threat.
“These people do not represent a danger to Switzerland, because Switzerland is not a target for these groups,” he explained. “They consider Switzerland a place of refuge and not a place to carry out operations.”
Demonisation
And he sympathised with Muslim leaders who fear a whole community is in danger of being demonised.
“It’s understandable. Even if there are one or two people in contact with terrorist organisations, they are not representative of the Muslim community as a whole. You cannot blame the whole community,” he said.
“My impression is that the officials are exaggerating the situation a bit and maybe contributing to the impression that there is a witch-hunt going on. I can understand why the Muslim community is worried about this.”
Jürg Schertenleib, spokesman for the non-governmental Swiss Refugee Council, takes a similar view. He says the authorities are right to take action where there is a clearly identifiable threat.
But he warned against giving the impression that Switzerland was a hotbed for Islamic fundamentalism.
“We shouldn’t forget that in many other countries the authorities are using the pretext that someone is a terrorist to justify repression,” he said.
Posted by Robert at April 22, 2004 10:05 AM
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There is No witch hunt. And if they want to Prevent one? Turn in the extremists.
Posted by: Gary at April 22, 2004 11:27 AM“These people do not represent a danger to Switzerland, because Switzerland is not a target for these groups,” he explained. “They consider Switzerland a place of refuge and not a place to carry out operations.”
This also implies that it would be acceptable to support or carry out operations elsewhere.
jay
Posted by: Jay Stevens at April 22, 2004 11:46 AM"Cui Bono" or "Who Benefits" one may ask the
same question about so called Islamic Moderates.
I would say the reason there are so many silent
Islamic moderates is that they think they will
benefit if the Islamic radicals win.
Of course Islamic moderates don't really exist,
at heart they are all radicals.
Let the witch hunts begin - I want to survive
and I want my children to be free from the
Islamic menace!
The Swiss believe that they are safe because they have remained neutral. There appear to be no students of Islam in Switzerland as they appear to be completely ignorant of its tenets. Their neutrality will not save them from the nasty surprise that is in store for them and all other naive Europeans.
Posted by: epg at April 22, 2004 4:34 PMSwitzerland's neutrality means nothing to the average muslim. Yet another group of terrorist enablers and supporters using Western law and protection against the West. When will the West start considering this islamic threat for what it is? A threat to Western values and culture - and that extends to traditional non-Western countries as well fighting the same battle as the West?
Posted by: CyberPinoy at April 22, 2004 5:55 PMits great to watch a muslim in fear for a change; the back lach should come and come fast. This is the only thing muslims understand; brut force.
Posted by: christian at April 22, 2004 9:41 PMThe Swiss have large bank deposits from the Arabs.
The Muslim brotherhood is big in Switzerland and has been there for many years.
There has been a rise in anti- israeli polemic in swiss newspapers.
see http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/Swissinfo.html?siteSect=105&sid=4700038
For swiss link to the Muslim Brtothehood and rise of "Koranic schools".
The president of the Al Taqwa Bank Group is Youssef Mustapha Nada, naturalized Italian, and a member of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood and Jamaa-al-Islamiya, which is directly allied with Al Qaeda through Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, said by some intelligence sources to be the brains behind bin Laden. When the Bahamas closed Al Taqwa Bank Ltd. early this year, Swiss authorities required a name change in Al Taqwa Bank, which then became registered in Switzerland as Nada Management Organization SA. It is the same Al Taqwa Bank.”
Mohammed Salim bin Mahfouz and the British weapons dealer Mohammed Saleh Affara, who is of Yemeni origin. Affara helped broker a series of weapons contracts (codenamed ‘Sawari-2’) between Saudi Arabia and France. Contact to Osama bin Laden, it is said, also comes via the Sudan-based part of the organization ‘Blessed Relief’ that is directed by Khalid’s son Abdul Rahman bin Mahfouz. The organization was suspected by the American and Egyptian secret services of being involved in planning an assassination attempt on Hosni Mubarak when he was making a state visit to Ethiopia. In the coffers of the International Islamic relief Organization one finds Zakat money from the Geneva-based DMI and relief aid from the Lugano-based Al Taqwa group.
Anyone who examines the al-Taqwa affair rapidly comes across the presence of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB), as al-Taqwa served as one of the Muslim Brotherhood’s key banking institutions in the West. In order to understand the MB’s presence in the West in general—and Switzerland in particular—it is absolutely necessary to grasp the vital role played by the late Said Ramadan, an extremely famous figure inside the Arab world but virtually unknown in the West.
see also http://www.spitfirelist.com/f381.html
Very good information Gruyere...thanks.
Posted by: jawa at April 23, 2004 10:27 AMI have been in Switzerland...one cannot "spit" in Switzerland before it hits the ground...someone will correct you for spitting. The Moslems, however, will use Swiss banks....and for that the Swiss should be faulted and investigated.
Judy Weismonger
Posted by: Judy at April 25, 2004 1:05 AM

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