The National - News

Call to suspend European funding for charity investigat­ed over links to Muslim Brotherhoo­d

- NICKY HARLEY

A vice president of the European Parliament has called for a suspension of funding to Islamic Relief while its alleged links to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d are investigat­ed.

Nicola Beer wrote to the European Commission and said it was unacceptab­le for the charity to receive EU funding if it had connection­s to the organisati­on.

“European funds must not fall into the hands of organisati­ons that are responsibl­e for anti-Semitism or other hatred,” she said.

The German lawyer, who is a member of the Free Democratic Party and has served as a member of the European Parliament since 2019, asked for an investigat­ion into the co-operation between the EC’s Directorat­e General for European Civil Protection and Humanitari­an Aid Operations (DG Echo) and NGOs with links to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and Hamas.

“The DG Echo includes in its list of non-government­al organisati­ons certified as EU humanitari­an partners for the period 2021 to 2027 Islamic Relief Germany and Islamic Relief Sweden,” she wrote.

“In 2017 and 2019, the German Federal Government stated that there were significan­t personnel connection­s between Islamic Relief Germany and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

“Additional­ly, Islamic Relief Germany and Islamic Relief Sweden are co-operation partners of Islamic Relief Worldwide, which was banned by the Israeli authoritie­s in 2014 for being part of the Hamas funding apparatus.

“Again, there are close personnel connection­s between Islamic Relief Germany and Islamic Relief Worldwide. Board members of Islamic Relief Germany, for example, also occupy executive positions at Islamic Relief Worldwide.”

Ms Beer asked the EC to reveal if it was aware of any connection­s between the groups and to clarify its mechanisms for reviewing organisati­ons with links to terrorists or antiSemite­s.

“Can the commission guarantee that it will immediatel­y end funding for and co-operation with non-government­al organisati­ons with links to terrorist or anti-Semitic organisati­ons?” she asked.

Her questions were submitted in April and the EC has six weeks to respond.

Ties between Islamic Relief, which was founded in the UK in 1984, and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d have been under scrutiny.

The Netherland­s and Germany banned Islamic Relief Worldwide from receiving funding and it has to provide monthly compliance reports to USAid, America’s national aid agency, after an urgent review into its links with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

German aid alliance group Aktion Deutschlan­d Hilft suspended Islamic Relief Germany’s membership until December 2021, with the charity’s funding frozen.

Sigrid Kaag, the Netherland­s’ Minister for Foreign Trade and Developmen­t, banned any release of government funds to the organisati­on in January, after an investigat­ion by the UK’s Charity Commission into anti-Semitism at Islamic Relief Worldwide.

The aid watchdog began its investigat­ion last July, when IRW trustee Heshmat Khalifa resigned over more than a dozen offensive Facebook posts from 2014 and 2015 that related to anti-Semitism and support of militant group Hamas.

Another IRW trustee, Almoutaz Tayara, admitted he had posted offensive material praising Hamas and an anti-Semitic cartoon, and fundraisin­g co-ordinator Abdul Mannan Bhatti regularly posted quotes from Sayyid Qutb, a founder of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

The Charity Commission said in January it was satisfied with the measures taken by the charity to address the publicatio­n of hate posts.

 ?? Getty ?? European Parliament member Nicola Beer called for funding for the Islamic Relief charity to be suspended
Getty European Parliament member Nicola Beer called for funding for the Islamic Relief charity to be suspended

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