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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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April 7, 2017
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Should
the Muslim Brotherhood Debate Include Another Rogue Islamist Party?
by Abha Shankar
IPT News
April 7, 2017
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A leading Islamist
party recently demanded
punishment for bloggers who "insult" Islam and condemned the
execution of the murderer of a prominent politician who spoke up against
his country's rigid blasphemy laws. The Islamist party also blamed the
U.S.-led war on terror for the rise in global jihadism and the destruction
of Islamic civilization.
For those of you wondering, the Islamist party in question is not the Ikhwan al-Muslimeen, or Muslim Brotherhood (MB),
whose designation as a terrorist organization is currently a hot topic of debate in Washington. Rather, it is the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), a South Asian Sunni revivalist
movement that has an active network in North America and the West.
The Islamist movement often defends terrorists and rationalizes attacks
against Western targets, in addition to working to advance a rigid
interpretation of Islam in The U.S. and other secularly-governed nations.
The debate over political action against Islamist parties, therefore, does
not stop with the Muslim Brotherhood.
JI's recent blasphemy push provides an example of that thinking in
action.
In a press release, Sirajul Haq, the leader of JI's Pakistan
affiliate, condemned the execution
of Mumtaz Qadri, who had killed former Punjab governor Salman Taseer, a
fierce opponent of Pakistan's blasphemy laws. Haq also called on Pakistan's
political leadership "not to link terrorism with Islam...to please
colonial powers," and alleged "that the enemy was trying to
destroy the Islamic civilization and values and to promote its obscener
[sic] and nude culture."
Haq had earlier described
Qadri's hanging as the "darkest moment in the country's history"
and said that by executing him, the Pakistani government "had proved
itself a slave of US President Obama and not a slave of the Holy
Prophet." He added that "the government had executed one Mumtaz
Qadri but now every youth and [sic] grown up in the country would turn into
Mumtaz Qadri."
JI's Ideological Similarities with the MB
The JI was founded in 1941 in Lahore, Pakistan (then part of British
India) by Islamist scholar Maulana Syed Abdul Ala Maududi. Maududi is a leading
pioneer of Islamic revivalism in South Asia who was inspired by the Brotherhood ideology. Maududi also had
a profound
influence on Sayyid Qutb, a leading Muslim Brotherhood ideologue who
has been described
as the "father of modern Islamist fundamentalism." Qutb is
believed to have also inspired al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.
Soon after the Arab Spring protests led to the ouster of the Hosni
Mubarak regime in Egypt, top Brotherhood and JI leaders met in Cairo to "strengthen the relations between
the Islamic movements in different countries " and "promote
Islam."
JI's primary objective in Pakistan "is to implement
Sharia" and "make Pakistan an Islamic welfare state" based
on the "model of the state of Madina," the multi-religious
Islamic state established by the Islamic prophet Muhammad in the 7th
century.
Although the MB has a deeper foundation and wider network in North
America, the front groups of the JI—Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) and its
charitable arm ICNA Relief—also have an active and long-term presence.
ICNA and ICNA Relief collaborate extensively with MB front groups in the
U.S. and Canada. For example, ICNA annually partners with the Muslim American Society (MAS) to host its national conventions
that feature radical speakers who advocate jihad and call for the elimination of Israel. MAS was created in 1993 as the Brotherhood's arm in the U.S.
Both ICNA and ICNA Relief are listed as members of
the U.S. Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO), an umbrella group
featuring several groups tied to the American Muslim Brotherhood. It was launched
in March 2014 to lobby Congress to enforce an Islamist agenda on U.S.
counterterrorism efforts, as well as on issues concerning American Muslims
and the larger Muslim ummah (community).
ICNA's educational programs feature staunch Islamist ideologues, and
Maududi's books have been promoted on the website of ICNA's youth division,
"Young Muslims."
After trying him in absentia, a Bangladeshi war crimes tribunal
sentenced to death ICNA's former vice president and leader of its New York chapter Ashrafuzzman Khan on
charges connected to the kidnapping and murder of several intellectuals
during the country's 1971 war of independence from Pakistan. The tribunal claimed Khan was the "chief executor" of the
killing squad, Al-Badr, a militant offshoot of the Jamaat-e-Islami. Following
accusations of alleged war crimes against Khan, ICNA scrubbed
the names of executive board members, including Khan, from its web page.
Khan still is believed to be in New York. But others convicted by the
tribunal have been executed, drawing criticism from ICNA as a "shameful act of judicial
killing which is part of the ongoing brutal persecution of political
opponents" in Bangladesh.
The Muslim Brotherhood also condemned the executions and called on the global
community to "reject and condemn these unjust and unfair trials that
violate all international norms and conventions...."
The Brotherhood's website described JI leader Mir Quasem, who was executed in September after being convicted of running
the lethal Al-Badr militia, as an "icon of freedom and resistance
against tyranny."
Quasem's "martyrdom" was compared to that of MB ideologue
Sayyid Qutb in 1966: "When the Egyptian regime executed Sayyid Qutb in
1966, they thought they killed his ideas and ideology; but—as tyrants do in
every era and place—they unintentionally immortalized him, inadvertently
spread his ideas, and unwittingly introduced the people to his call—his
ideology."
JI Leaders Featured As Speakers at ICNA Events
Yusuf Islahi, a leader of JI's Indian affiliate (JI Hind), is scheduled to speak at the upcoming MAS-ICNA convention
in Baltimore. Islahi, a chief
patron of ICNA's dawah or proselytizing project, WhyIslam,
has spoken
at past MAS-ICNA conferences. In a 2009 interview, Islahi criticized the Western
interest-based economic system: "A society where interest is accepted
and becomes widespread is disliked to such an extent that both Allah and
His Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, are at war with them."
At a 2001 JI Hind event hosted in the Indian city of Aligarh, Islahi reportedly blamed Jews for
the 9/11 attacks, which he described as a fitting response to American
arrogance: "[T]he September 11 event is a well-planned conspiracy to
defame Islam. Muslims are being blamed for it without any evidence.
Everyone knows who is the real culprit, Jews .... The United States has
unjustly and arrogantly ruled the world for too long Allah has destroyed
that arrogance on September 11. God willing, this will also inaugurate the
age of Islam the world over."
ICNA's invitations to JI leaders to speak at its events goes back a long
way. Former JI leader Qazi Hussein Ahmed, for example, was a featured speaker at ICNA's 1999 convention in
Baltimore. In an interview the same year with ICNA's newsmagazine Message
International, Ahmad spoke about the role Islamist movements such as
the JI and MB play in creating an Islamic state: "The Islamic
movements through out [sic] the world under the guidance of Maulana Syed
Abdul A'la Maudoodi (r) and Shaheed Hasan al-Banna (r) and many other prominent
Muslim leaders and scholars and Mujahideen have adopted the same attitude
and the same process which was evolved by the Prophet of Allah. Call the
people towards Allah and to train and purify them, organize them into
Jama'ah and work for the service of mankind. In this process we will create
an Islamic society, an Islamic government and an Islamic state."
The late
Ghulam Azam, a former leader of JI's Bangladesh chapter, also spoke at the 1999 convention. Azam was sentenced to 90 years in prison for committing war
crimes during Bangladesh's 1971 war of independence. Hamas leader Sheikh Muhammad Siyam also was part of the 1999 convention.
JI's Support for Terror
JI affiliates in Bangladesh and Pakistan criticize the United States,
openly voice support for terrorist groups and praise their leaders. For
example, people like Osama bin Laden never die, former JI Pakistan leader
Syed Munawar Hasan said in a 2014 video. They continue to live in the people's hearts
people and give voice to their people, he said. Hasan described Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud's killing of in
a U.S. drone strike as "martyrdom." He called the U.S. an enemy of Pakistan: "America was
our enemy yesterday, it is so today, and tomorrow too it will not refrain
from enmity against us."
The JI has provided an ideological platform and recruiting base for
terrorist groups in South Asia. One example is the Hizb-ul Mujahideen (HuM), a Kashmiri jihadist group
that emerged in 1989 as JI's militant wing.
The U.S. designated HuM as a foreign terrorist organization in
2004. In a recent video, HuM commander Zakir Rashid Bhat noted that the Kashmiri people's struggle for
independence was "nationalistic" and was "haraam"
("not permissible") in Islam. "Nationalism and democracy are
not permissible in Islam," he said. HuM has been behind several
terrorist attacks in Kashmir. In 2013, HuM claimed responsibility for an attack on an Indian police
camp in Kashmir that killed five security personnel.
JI's former student wing in India, the Student Islamic Movement of India or SIMI has been
implicated in some of the deadliest terror attacks in the country. The
group has been banned in India and is alleged to have links to terrorist groups such as the Indian Mujahideen (IM) and the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed
(JeM).
Nurul Islam Marzan, one of the masterminds behind the July terror attack on a Dhaka café that killed 17
foreigners, helped lead a group with alleged ties to the banned Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) and was active in JI's student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir (ICS) at Chittagong University.
Suspects in the 2013 murder of blogger and activist Ahmed Rajib Haider reportedly acted on orders from an ICS leader.
The Jamaat-e-Islami global network's support for a totalitarian Islamist
ideology provides an environment conducive to the radicalization of future
terrorists. The Islamist movement's active presence in the U.S. and the
West, its defense of terrorists, condemnation of U.S foreign policy,
justification of terror attacks against the U.S. and its allies, and rejection
of Western democratic values and ideals make it relevant in the debate
about designating the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist group. The Islamist
threat is not isolated to one source.
Related Topics: Abha Shankar,
Jamaat-e-Islami,
Islamism,
Muslim
Brotherhood, terrorist
designations, ICNA,
USCMO,
Sirajul
Haq, Bangladesh
war crimes tribunal, Mir
Quasem, Yusuf
Islahi, Maulana
Maududi
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