The Advance of the Muslim Brotherhood in the UK


by Michael Whine
Published on Monday, September 12, 2005
ARTICLES 
http://www.futureofmuslimworld.com/research/pubID.21/pub_detail.asp


SINCE ITS FORMAL ARRIVAL IN THE UK NINE YEARS AGO, the Muslim Brotherhood
(Ikhwan al Islami—MB) has grown from having no organizational presence to
being perhaps the most dynamic influence within the British Muslim
population. It has done so by seizing the initiative on issues of concern to
Muslims, whereas more moderate activists have dithered or failed to act
effectively.

In 1996, the first representative of the MB in Britain, Kamal el-Helbawy, an
Egyptian, was able to say that “there are not many members here, but many
Muslims in Britain intellectually support the aims of the Muslim
Brotherhood.” He added that at that time, the object of the MB in Britain
was only to disseminate information on Islam, Islamic issues and movements,
and to rectify the distortions and misunderstandings created by “different
forces against Islam.” 

In September 1999, the MB opened a “global information centre” in London.  A
press notice published in Muslim News stated that it would “specialize in
promoting the perspectives and stances of the Muslim Brotherhood, and
[communicate] between Islamic movements and the global mass media.”

The Arab Expatriates 

London had been named “Londonistan” by the French security services during
the 1990s, when they became alarmed and frustrated by the growing presence
of Algerian Islamists who used London as a rear base from which to conduct
their terrorist campaign against France. They were mostly, but by no means
all, members of the Armed Islamic Group (Groupe Islamique Armeé—GIA). France
sought the extradition of some of them in connection with the bombings that
terrorized Parisians during the 1980s. The British authorities took the
view, however, that they should be granted asylum, provided they had
committed no crimes on British soil. Since extradition requests take many
years to work their way through the British courts, and since defendants are
granted the right to appeal to a higher court at every stage in the process,
the French authorities openly voiced their dismay.  

Among the Arab Islamist ideologues who had been granted asylum—and in some
cases, the indefinite right to stay, or even British citizenship—was Rashid
Gannouchi, the leader of the Tunisian al-Nahda party who had left Tunisia on
completion of a prison sentence for terrorism offences, and members of the
Libyan Islamic Fighting Group. Another leader was the Syrian expatriate Omar
Fostock (aka. Omar Bakri Mohammed—OBM), who with another Syrian expatriate,
Farid Kassim, founded a branch of Hizb ut-Tahrir (Islamic Liberation
Party—HT) in 1986. He had arrived in Britain, after being expelled from
Saudi Arabia, to where he claims he had fled after the late President
Assad’s crackdown on the MB. In Saudi Arabia he claims that he was active in
another group with a similar ideology, al-Muhajiroun (The Emigrants—AM).

HT was founded by Shaykh Taqi Uddin Al Nabahani, an Islamic court judge, in
Jerusalem in 1953, after he had left the Palestinian branch of the MB. HT
follows a similar ideology as the MB, but Nabahani promoted the resurrection
of the Islamic Caliphate, which had been destroyed in 1924 on the
dissolution of the Turkish Empire, as the main priority. He believed that
Muslims may only live in a Muslim state governed by Sharia law. This goal
takes precedence over all others and explains why, for example, HT’s members
have generally refrained from campaigning on other Islamist and MB issues,
and been criticized for so doing. Nabahani had also been much influenced by
Haj Amin Al Husseini, then living in exile in Egypt, and as a consequence
had introduced an even greater element of anti-Semitism into HT ideology
than it had inherited from the post-war MB leadership under Sayyid Qutb.  

HT first began public activity among Arab students studying at the colleges
of London University, notably Imperial College and Queen Mary College. It
rapidly gained notoriety within student circles for its anti-democratic,
anti-Semitic, anti-Zionist, anti-Hindu, anti-Sikh and homophobic
campaigning. However, most of its activity was focused on moderate Muslim
students. HT’s confrontational stance led to it being banned by the National
Union of Students in 1994, and eventually, after numerous complaints from
the Union of Jewish Students and the Board of Deputies of British Jews, to
the publication of guidelines against religious coercion for all university
heads, by their umbrella body, the Committee of Vice Chancellors and
Principals (later renamed Universities UK).

OBM’s publicity-seeking stunts, however, drew criticism from the HT
leadership based in Jordan and Lebanon. In 1996 he left the party with the
majority of its active members to form AM. In doing so he joined up with
Shaykh Mohammed Al Mas’ari, the Saudi Islamist exile whose own high-profile
activities led to his split from the Campaign for the Defence of Legitimate
Rights (CDLR), a group that Al Mas’ari had co-founded with Saad Al Fagih, a
fellow Saudi. As a consequence of CDLR’s criticism of the Saudi royal
family, the British Government sought to extradite Mas’ari to the Caribbean.
But he had successfully appealed his case, and was eventually allowed to
stay.  

Although publicly shunned by many Muslim community leaders, OBM and Mas’ari
have maintained links to MB and Salafi group leaders and activists. In
particular, they have cooperated in the recruitment of young Muslims for
jihad training in Bosnia, Afghanistan, Iraq and Chechnya. Initially, this
may have been done by sending volunteers on the aid convoys to Bosnia, where
they were recruited and dispatched onward for terrorism training.

After the 1996 split, HT resumed its more normal mode of operation focused
on clandestine recruitment, usually on a one-to-one basis, and building the
organization. Following its ban on campus activity in 1994 and again in 1995
(the NUS ban was to be  repeated again in 2004), HT developed the use of
front names and indeed barely slowed  its pace of activity as it was able to
successfully hoodwink most university administrations and the National Union
of Students. Among its front names have been the  Muslim Current Affairs
Society, the Young Liberating Party, the Islamic Front, the 1924 Committee,
and the New World Society. 

The Internationalization of the Brotherhood

The repression by the Egyptian authorities which followed the attempted
assassination of Gamal Abdel Nasser, and their suppression in Iraq and
Syria, prompted many MB leaders to flee to Saudi Arabia; some also fled to
Europe, primarily to Germany. As a consequence, and to maintain links, an
international council was created in 1982, but later developments in the
1980s and 1990s spurred a more effective international liaison.  

The Palestinian branch recreated itself in 1987 as Hamas, and the need arose
to secure funding for its social and terrorist activity. The deportation by
Saudi Arabia of MB leaders in 2002, the arrests of many leaders in Egypt in
2003, the eclipse of MB scholar Hasan al-Turabi in the Sudan, and the
transfer to London of part of its public relations machinery all prompted a
greater need for coordination. This all came about against a backdrop of
concern over the ageing leadership in Egypt, and indeed for the future of
the Brotherhood itself.  

Central to the regeneration efforts at the international level is Shaykh
Yusuf al-Qaradawi, the Egyptian scholar living in exile in Qatar. Qaradawi’s
high profile and leadership role is maintained by his popular weekly
satellite television programme on Al Jazeera and the judicious use of two
web sites: www.islamonline.net <http://www.islamonline.net/>  and
www.qaradawi.net <http://www.qaradawi.net/> , through which he issues
guidance to MB members, and millions of other Muslims. To some, Qaradawi is
seen as a leading moderate, at least in the sense that he helped to
instigate the condemnation of the 9/11 attack signed by prominent Islamist
leaders and published in the London-based al Quds al Arabi newspaper, and
for his regular criticism of the Wahhabi-influenced obscurantism and
rigidity that guides the salafi wing of the Islamist movement. But in
another sense, Qaradawi is also the leader of the MB’s activist wing moving
the MB beyond the immediate control of the ageing leadership by virtue of
his religious leadership of Hamas. Specifically, he has been active in
raising money for it by his founding chairmanship of the Union for Good
Charity (I’tilafu Al Khayr—Union for Good and Aathlaf Al Hin—the Charity
Coalition) and issuing fatwas that support the use of suicide bombings
against Israel and Coalition forces in Iraq, including justifying the use of
women and children for these missions.

Another issue which may be prompting the internationalization of the MB is
the action taken to freeze the assets and close the operation of its bank,
Bank Al Taqwa, in the wake of the al-Qaeda attack on the US. This leaves it
without its main financial arm and without the benefit of a funding
mechanism. A review of the shareholders’ list of the bank provides a list of
its international leadership and senior membership, and it is reasonable to
assume that the size of the shareholding is some indicator of the
individual’s seniority within the organisation.

As a consequence of the above, the MB convened a conference in the Gulf in
late 2004, out of which emerged the World Council of Muslim Clerics (aka.
The International Association of Muslim Scholars.) Attending the meeting
were Qaradawi, Muhammad Mahdi Akef, the elected General Guide, and Mahmad
Izzat, the Secretary of the Brotherhood who were both allowed to leave Egypt
for the purpose.

Reports from the conference suggest that the MB is refocusing some of its
activity on international growth and moving away from violence. This may be
for two reasons. Firstly, the organization intends to evangelize among
Europe’s growing Muslim population (thought to be at least 16 million).
Here, it is instructive to note that many Muslim leaders now refer to Europe
not as a land of war (Dar al-Harb) but as Muslim territory (Dar al-Islam),
within which Sharia law should prevail.

Secondly, the MB leadership sees the necessity of confronting the salafi
trends within Europe, which have, in part, led to its becoming a command and
control center and recruitment arena for terrorism elsewhere. At the same
time, Europe has also become a target for terrorism after the successful
attack in Madrid (March 2004) and the foiled attacks in Strasbourg (December
1999) and Germany (September 2003). This is no longer al-Qaeda-directed
terrorism but rather the product of the emerging salafi-jihadi ideology that
promotes individual acts of terrorism by local groups acting in accordance
with a larger strategy of attacking American and Israeli targets, as well as
countries supporting the Coalition in Iraq, but without any central
direction.  

As the MB renounces salafi-driven violence and focuses on recruitment in
Europe, it also seeks accommodation with the Arab states that formerly
persecuted its members. The Gulf Conference had been preceded by the release
from prison of approximately 300 Syrian members who had been incarcerated
since the 1980s. Their release followed meetings between President Assad,
Qaradawi and Sudanese and Jordanian MB leaders. Shortly thereafter, the MB’s
Syrian branch released a “political programme” in London, in which they
renounced violence and declared their willingness to participate in
political life. At the same time, the MB’s Iraqi branch announced that it
was coming to terms with the situation in Iraq and intended to participate
in the electoral process.

The French scholar Gilles Kepel notes that there are two opposing trends
within European Islam. The first includes both wahabi salafi and tablighi
influences which reject European identity and cultural norms and promote
either secession or terrorism. The second allows the creation of a dynamic
Muslim community blending what Europe has to offer with Islam and adherence
to Sharia, and allowing the building of bridges with the Middle East and
Southeast Asia. This is the trend best exemplified by Geneva-based Tariq
Ramadan, grandson of the MB founder Hassan al-Banna.

Europe, however, has pre-existing trans-continental institutions which serve
to advance MB ideologies. The Federation of Islamic Organisations in Europe
(FIOE), known in France as the Union des Organisations Islamiques de
l’Europe (UOIE) acts as the main vehicle. The FIOE is headquartered at
Markfield, Leicestershire, which is also the UK center for the Pakistan
Islamist movement, Jamaat-e-Islami. In this fashion, the two organizations
have advanced the ideological link made between them after the Second World
War by Sayyid Qutb and Mawlana Maududi. The trustees of the FIOE include
Ahmed Jaballah, director of the European Institute for Human Science, and
Ahmed al-Rawi. Two associated entities are the European Trust and the
European Council for Fatwa and Research, the members of which are the MB
leadership in Europe and the Arab world, and include Qaradawi, Rashid
Gannouchi, al-Rawi and Shaykh Faisal Mawlawi (Lebanon’s MB leader).

All these linked bodies should be seen both as a challenge to the ageing
Egyptian-based MB leadership, and as an attempt to extend MB influence in
Europe, by the most prominent activists within the organization and by those
who are not constrained by the circumscribed atmosphere that exists within
most Arab states.

In a November 2002 interview the then acting General Guide Ma’mun al-Hudaybi
admitted this problem and pointed towards the future when he stated:

The International Organisation of the Brotherhood is not something that is
trivial, it is a symbol that has value and importance. Nevertheless there
are some things it could have done even though it was not able to meet. But
we must be realistic. This organisation will not govern a state someday.
This is something that is not coming … we do not have anyone from the state
(Egypt) with whom we can talk. If only they would create a channel between
us and them. We have often called for this, but it has not happened.

It is for this reason perhaps that the World Council of Muslim Clerics is
headquartered in Dublin and that its first meeting took place in London, in
July 2004.

The Growth of the MB in Britain

Two issues gave impetus to the growth of the MB in Britain: Muslim
opposition to the second Gulf War and the Islamist campaign for Palestine.
The Muslim Association of Britain (MAB), which is in effect the MB of
Britain, was founded in 1997 by Arab migrants, some of whom had been MB
leaders in their countries of origin. Their activism has revolutionized the
impact of political Islam in Britain, shifting it to a more anti-Western,
anti-Israel and anti-Semitic outlook.

The public first became aware of the MAB in April 2002 when it organized a
large pro-Palestinian rally in central London. One Islamist website promoted
the event as “the Muslim Brotherhood launch biggest Palestine rally in the
UK.” At the rally, some demonstrators signified their approval for terrorism
by dressing as suicide bombers; others carried placards that had been
downloaded from the MAB website equating Israel with Nazi Germany.  

Kemal Al Helbawy, the founding president of the MAB, was a speaker at the
rally. Other MAB leaders include Mohammed Sawalha, a former Hamas military
commander, and Azzam Tamimi, a former official spokesman for the Jordanian
MB and director of the Islamic Action Front’s parliamentary office in Amman.
>From 1989 to 1992, Tamimi had edited Al Ribat, the Jordanian MB weekly
paper. A fourth prominent MAB leader at the event was Anas Al Tikriti, the
son of the Iraqi MB leader Osama Al Tikriti.  

Their existing infrastructure was augmented by the transfer of the
“political office” of the Syrian MB branch, from Amman to London, in 2000.
The MAB hosted numerous meetings for visiting MB leaders, including Qaradawi
and Anwar Al Awlaki, the Yemeni leader and former Imam at the San Diego and
Falls Church, Virginia mosques, and who was described by a US House
Intelligence Committee member as “more than a coincidental figure in the
9/11 plot.”

Opposition to the second Gulf War provided the opening that the MAB needed
to move to center stage. It had already established its growing presence
within the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), the representative Muslim body,
and indeed had been subjected to internally-imposed limits in order to avoid
undue MB influence within the MCB. But, its involvement in the Stop the War
Coalition, led by the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and the Communist Party
of Britain, gave it real power. The anti-war coalition organized a series of
rallies in 2003 that proved to be Britain’s biggest ever political
demonstrations.

The MAB influence resulted in the slogan “Don’t attack Iraq/Free Palestine,”
thereby conflating two different issues, but seen by Islamists as part of
their joint concern. Complaints by some demonstrators that anti-Semitic
leaflets and placards equating the Star of David with the Nazi swastika on
the first rally had no place on an anti-war demonstration were initially
brushed aside by the organizers, but appear to have had some effect as they
did not reappear on the subsequent rallies.

In this manner though, the MAB took over, in part, the leadership of both
the anti-war lobby and the pro-Palestinian lobby, and should be contrasted
with earlier, much less effective Islamist campaigns to ban Salman Rushdie’s
Satanic Verses. Having forged this alliance with the non-Muslim Left, the
MAB went on to build another tactical alliance with George Galloway and his
RESPECT Party, campaigning for withdrawal from Iraq and against Labour Party
foreign policy. Staffed mainly by the SWP and other hard left groups, but
attracting votes from the substantial (Asian) Muslim population, it won a
parliamentary seat in Bethnal Green for Galloway, who unseated the Jewish
black MP Oona King, and also established itself as a genuine force in some
other seats.  

RESPECT’s performance in each of the twenty-six constituencies contested was
directly related to the number and proportion of Muslim voters in that seat.
Their best five results came in seats that were ranked by the MCB as being
in the top ten constituencies in the country, according to the size of their
Muslim electorate. By the time of the General Election, however, the MAB’s
close association with the Labour Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, had
drawn them away from any formal association with RESPECT, preferring instead
to focus their efforts on supporting anti-war elements within the Labour
Party.

MAB influence on Livingstone provides a case book example of political
manipulation. Ostensibly a Labour Party member, albeit a maverick one with a
lifetime’s association with the far left and a capacity for annoying those
in power by his public support for terrorists he deems to be freedom
fighters (as with his embrace of the IRA when a Member of Parliament),
Livingstone hosted the annual meeting of the European Council for Fatwa and
Research, and Qaradawi, its leader, in July 2004, in City Hall. Despite
public criticism from a coalition of diverse interests, including many
Greater London Assembly members, the Jewish community, Hindu, Sikh and gay
organizations, he went on to host and promote other MAB interests. Among
these was a press conference where he was the only speaker to mention the
French hijab (headscarf) ban, which was the subject of the session. Neither
Al Tikriti nor Qaradawi mentioned the ban; both concentrated instead on
promoting the leadership role that the Fatwa Council and its members play in
relations between Muslims and the rest of society.

It is clear from the transcript of the conference that its substantive
purpose was to promote Qaradawi and the Fatwa Council, and that the
headscarf ban debate and the use of the Mayor was just a means to this end.

In another move to secure their presence in the UK, the MAB also took over
the management of the North London Central Mosque in Finsbury Park in
February 2005. The Mosque itself had formerly been taken over by Abu Hamza
al-Masri, and used by him as a center for preaching jihad and for
recruitment for terrorism. This now gives them a new base from which to
operate. It should also be noted that the MB has additional connections to
the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Wales
at Lampeter, thereby giving it an influence within tertiary education.

In so doing, the MB could be said to have reached a degree of maturity, the
lack of which had been lamented by Helbawi in an important interview in Le
Monde Diplomatique. In this he had lamented that “the international
organization isn’t an organization at all, it’s just a coordinating body. It
needs to work openly and meet with public figures; as it is only the secret
services that know when its main figures come and go. There’s no proper
research center anywhere in the West, or a TV channel. We need to create a
global forum for dialogue and to increase our activities.”

What differentiates the modus operandi of the MB and the MAB from other
Islamist organizations is their establishment of corporate structures
underpinning their finances, and extending their reach within other communal
structures. Their attitude is exemplified  by the slogan “Thinking Globally,
Acting Locally,” which is used on MAB banners and publications.  

The MB now operates through a series of interlocking companies managed by
those listed above, and others, of Palestinian, Syrian, Libyan, Somali,
Iraqi and Egyptian origin. These entities include: the MAB itself, the
Muslim Welfare Trust, Interpal (listed by the US Treasury as a Specially
Designated Global Terrorist Entity), the Palestine Return Centre, the
Institute of Islamic Political Thought (of which Tamimi is Director),
Mashreq Media Services (which publish the Hamas newspaper Filisteen Al
Muslima), Palestine Times (the English language pro-Hamas paper), the Centre
for International Policy Studies, and others.

The creation of such a large scale, interdependent financial infrastructure
to resource public, educational and media activity spread across the UK and
Ireland suggests a long term strategy designed to keep it safe from Arab
states’ (and American and Israeli) investigations. Indeed, it was in
anticipation of this, and as a consequence particularly of US investigations
of their funding structure, that Israeli commentator Uhud Yaari noted that
“there may be an effort to set up new centers in Europe.”

Conclusions 

MB ideology in the 21st century should not be seen as monolithic. Rather, it
presents a spectrum ranging from the extremes of salafi-jihadists committed
to the violent removal of Western influences and presence in Muslim lands
(and there is disagreement as to how far this extends: is it the Arab world
or does it extend as far as the Muslim expansion in the thirteenth century
and to the extension of Dar al-Islam by violence if necessary), to the
modernizing ideas of Tariq Ramadan and others who seek a Europeanized
version of Islam that nevertheless remains separated, evangelical and living
according to Sharia within European society.

What is apparent is that the MB is making determined and successful efforts
to influence Britain’s diverse Muslim population and many of its communal
organizations. In doing so they are representing themselves as middle of the
road, though they are not. They are influencing and taking the lead in
representing Muslim “political” interests, as opposed to the existing
organizations such as the MCB and the councils of mosques which have focused
on ‘faith’ issues. The MB have recognized the political power of Muslim
demography and have begun to exploit the fear of that power among
politicians, but have not yet managed to actually mobilize the Muslim vote.
This they clearly aim to accomplish in due course.

(F)AIR USE NOTICE: All original content and/or articles and graphics in this
message are copyrighted, unless specifically noted otherwise. All rights to
these copyrighted items are reserved. Articles and graphics have been placed
within for educational and discussion purposes only, in compliance with
"Fair Use" criteria established in Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976.
The principle of "Fair Use" was established as law by Section 107 of The
Copyright Act of 1976. "Fair Use" legally eliminates the need to obtain
permission or pay royalties for the use of previously copyrighted materials
if the purposes of display include "criticism, comment, news reporting,
teaching, scholarship, and research." Section 107 establishes four criteria
for determining whether the use of a work in any particular case qualifies
as a "fair use". A work used does not necessarily have to satisfy all four
criteria to qualify as an instance of "fair use". Rather, "fair use" is
determined by the overall extent to which the cited work does or does not
substantially satisfy the criteria in their totality. If you wish to use
copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' you
must obtain permission from the copyright owner. For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 

THIS DOCUMENT MAY CONTAIN COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL.  COPYING AND DISSEMINATION
IS PROHIBITED WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE COPYRIGHT OWNERS.

 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: osint@yahoogroups.com
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to