Islamic Group Banned by Many Is Not on U.S. Terrorist List
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A27783-2004Dec26?language=printer 

Islamic Group Banned by Many Is Not on U.S. Terrorist List

By David B. Ottaway
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 27, 2004; Page A04

The militant Islamic group exhorts Muslims to suicide bombings, martyrdom 
against
American "infidels" and the killing of Jews. It openly advocates replacing all
Middle East governments with an Islamic caliphate and rails against "the 
American
campaign to suppress Islam."

The group has been outlawed in all Arab countries, as well as in Turkey, 
Pakistan,
Russia and throughout Central Asia, where hundreds of its members have been 
jailed.
Germany, too, has banned the group because it "supports the use of violence as a
means to realize political interests," according to the German Interior 
Ministry.

*photo
Pakistani policemen arrest an activist of the Islamic Liberation Party at an 
October
anti-U.S demonstration in Lahore. (Mohsin Raza -- Reuters)

But the Bush administration, which has designated more than 390 groups and
individuals as "global terrorists," has declined to add this particular one to 
the
list.

How to handle Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami -- the Islamic Liberation Party or HT -- 
has
become the focus of a debate inside and outside the Bush administration that 
weighs
the president's promise to promote democracy in the greater Middle East against 
the
new imperatives of the fight against terrorism.

Two conservative think tanks, the Nixon Center and the Heritage Foundation, are
pressing the administration to designate the Islamic Liberation Party as a 
terrorist
group. Human Rights Watch, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group, and
experts at the liberal Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the 
Brookings
Institution contend that such a step would fan the fires of Islamic extremism.

Zeyno Baran, the Nixon Center's international security program director, has 
held a
series of workshops this year in Ankara, Turkey, and Washington to highlight the
party's revolutionary goals and tactics. She argues it should not be protected 
on
grounds of freedom of religion or speech. "It's not a religious organization, 
it's a
political party that uses religion as a tool" and is drifting toward violence, 
she
said.

Both Baran and the Heritage Foundation's Central Asian specialist, Ariel Cohen, 
have
testified in Congress urging designation. But others argue that would incite 
Central
Asian governments to crack down on all Muslim groups, making the situation 
worse.

"It doesn't serve anybody's interest to go after peaceful Muslim believers," 
said
Acacia Shields, senior Central Asia researcher for the New York-based Human 
Rights
Watch. "There has to be a distinction made between Muslims we have disagreements
with and Muslims actively involved in violence."

Despite the inflammatory rhetoric on its Web site and in pamphlets, the Islamic
Liberation Party does not explicitly espouse violence as a means of coming to 
power
itself. Nor has the party been found engaging in terrorism, according to State
Department officials.

The party is gaining followers throughout Central Asia, and some U.S. officials 
say
that a decision to brand it a terrorist entity could turn it into another al 
Qaeda
and undermine U.S. efforts to encourage the emergence of moderate Islamic groups
throughout the region.

The matter could be further complicated by the U.S. relationship with 
Uzbekistan,
which has permitted the United States to use an air base for its operations 
against
al Qaeda inside neighboring Afghanistan. The Islamic Liberation Party -- though
outlawed -- is becoming the main political opposition to Uzbekistan's repressive
secular government. To some U.S. human rights groups, the party has become a 
symbol
of the struggle for religious and political freedoms against such repressive
governments.

Although it has branches in many European countries, there have been no reports 
of
Islamic Liberation being active in the United States, though its literature has
appeared in some mosques.

Under a 2001 presidential order, a foreign entity can be designated a global
terrorist if it either engaged in an act of terrorism, provides material 
support to
another designated group or poses "a significant risk" to U.S. foreign policy. A
designation results in U.S. and U.N. sanctions that make the group an 
international
pariah.

Under another provision of the 2001 USA Patriot Act, the U.S. government can 
also
designate an organization if it "incites to commit" a terrorist act. Seldom 
used to
justify designations, the State Department did so on Dec. 17 in the case of a
television network -- al-Manar -- that belongs to Lebanon's Shiite political 
group
Hezbollah.

"Our law says that the organization [al-Manar] can be put on the list if it 
commits
or incites to commit any terrorist activity," State Department spokesman Richard
Boucher said.

"The United States is having a very hard time dealing with this," said Nina 
Shea,
director of the Center for Religious Freedom at the Washington-based Freedom 
House,
a nonprofit that monitors political and religious persecution worldwide. "It's a
very fine line between inciting and training for terrorism. Everybody's trying 
to
figure out where to draw the line."

One senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said 
that
Islamic radicalism in Central Asia is "a serious and growing danger not fully
appreciated by people in this town." He called Islamic Liberation "a factory" 
for
producing radical Islamic ideas but said on balance he still believes it should 
not
be designated as a terrorist group.

"They say they want to overthrow secular governments, that it's okay to fly 
planes
into buildings," he said. "But they claim to be nonviolent. They are using our
language against us. . . . It's hard to nail them."

Part of the administration's anti-terrorism strategy has been to try to persuade
Central Asian leaders to allow independent and moderate Islamic groups to 
operate
legally. Uzbek leaders, however, say they see nothing moderate in Islamic
Liberation's announced goals.

The party's aim "is gaining political power through religion," Zukhriddin
Khusnidinov, an adviser to Uzbek President Islam Karimov, said at a conference 
at
the Nixon Center in Washington in October. "It is crucial to outlaw all radical
religious groups whose ideology generates international terrorism," added 
Abdulaziz
Kamilov, the Uzbek ambassador to Washington.

"It's kind of a conundrum for the U.S. government," said the senior Bush
administration official. "The rhetoric is really vile. The question is: Do they 
have
the right to freedom of expression?"

Arab and other Muslim governments have been pondering that question for 52 
years.
The party was founded in 1952 by a Palestinian judge, Taqiuddin Nabhani, who 
lived
in East Jerusalem, then under Jordanian rule. He broke away from the Muslim
Brotherhood, an Egypt-based militant Islamic group, rejecting its willingness to
even consider cooperation with Egypt's secular authorities in seeking power.

Jordanian authorities refused to recognize the party and arrested some of its
leaders, forcing it underground, where it continued to spread slowly throughout 
the
Muslim world. Today, it has branches in 30 to 40 counties from Indonesia to 
Denmark,
recruiting particularly on college campuses and at mosques.

Still, little is known about this international organization that has attracted 
tens
of thousands of followers worldwide. Its Web site, www.hizb-ut-tahrir.org, says 
it
is "a political party whose ideology is Islam." Yet, it has shown no interest in
participating in elections and none in sharing power with other parties.

Although its spokesmen renounce violence, the party's Web site describes a
three-stage plan aimed at "seizing the reins of power" across the Muslim world. 
"It
is forbidden to seize partial power," the Web site states, and "the 
implementation
of Islam must be comprehensive."

Its tactics for achieving these goals seem inspired by those of communist 
parties.
The first stage of its plan calls for indoctrinating recruits in small "study
groups" that subsequently morph into secret cells of five to six people 
operating
independently of each other, according to a report from the International Crisis
Group, which has issued several reports on the party.

Islamic Liberation was involved in failed coup attempts in both Jordan and Egypt
before renouncing violence in the mid-1970s. When Nabhani died in 1978, another
Palestinian, Abdul Kaddim Zalloum, a religious scholar educated at Al-Azhar
University in Cairo, became party leader and remained so until his death in 
April
2003.

The current leader is Sheik Ata Abu Rashta, a Palestinian Jordanian Islamic 
scholar
about whom little is known, including his whereabouts.




=====
A
 
 
 
 
Ma-Salama
Prince oF Destiny http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Revival-Of-Muslim-Mind/
 





                
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