|
Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
|
September 8, 2017
|
|
U.S.
Islamists Claim Win Over Legislation Banning Funding to Terror-Tied Charity
by Abha Shankar
IPT News
September 8, 2017
|
|
|
Share:
|
Be the
first of your friends to like this.
Legislation seeking
to ban federal funding to a UK-based Hamas charity was withdrawn Thursday after Islamist groups advocated voting against the measure.
U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla, introduced an amendment to the State and Foreign Operations
Appropriations Act to block taxpayers' dollars from going to Islamic Relief
Worldwide, IRW, or Islamic Relief UK late last month because the Islamist
charity allegedly funneled money to Hamas, the Washington Free Beacon
reported.
IRW received $370,000 in federal funding for the fiscal
years 2015 and 2016, government records show.
National Islamist groups and their allies rallied to the charity's
defense.
"Islamic Relief Worldwide is a valued partner of numerous
governments and the United Nations bodies globally, and exists as a
humanitarian organization dedicated to the alleviation of poverty and
suffering internationally," the Council of American-Islamic Relations Chicago chapter
(CAIR-Chicago) said in a press release urging American Muslims to pressure
Congress to reject the legislation.
The announcement also claimed that "IRW has been awarded $704,662
worth of funding from US federal sources for its work in Kenya, Ethiopia,
and Central African Republic."
CAIR describes
itself as the "nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization"
but has roots in a Hamas-support network in the United States.
Israel banned IRW from operating in the West Bank in 2014
saying the charity funneled money to Hamas. Iyaz Ali, a British national of
Pakistani origin who worked for IRW's Gaza office, allegedly transferred
money to Hamas institutions outlawed in Israel, a 2006 communique issued by the Israeli prime minister's
office said.
Files found on Ali's computer tied IRW with illegal Hamas funds in the
UK, Saudi Arabia, and Nablus, the statement said. Investigators also found
"photographs of swastikas superimposed on IDF symbols, of senior Nazi
German officials, of Osama Bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, as well as
many photographs of Hamas military activities."
The UAE designated IRW as a terrorist organization last year.
Britain's largest bank HSBC also declined to do further business with Islamic Relief UK
in January 2016, citing the charity's alleged terror ties.
In the United
States, the DeSantis amendment also drew calls from Islamic Relief USA and the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) asking supporters to
contact their representatives to voice their opposition.
Islamic Relief USA labeled the amendment as "malicious and
misguided" and claimed it "seeks to denigrate and undermine this
widely respected civil society organization."
"If passed it could cause substantial material damage to IRW's
life-saving work around the world. Lives and livelihoods in some of the
world's poorest and most disadvantaged countries are at stake,"
Islamic Relief USA claimed.
The organization has shared close ties with IRW since its inception. The
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) underscored the connections in IRUSA's 1993
articles of incorporation: "Your case is being transferred to
National Office for further review due to your close association with
Islamic Relief, United Kingdom, an organization that does...not have tax
exempt status in the United States. As stated in your application, Islamic
Relief, United Kingdom will administer the operation of your numerous,
diverse programs."
Those ties continue to this day.
On its "Affiliates and Alliances" page, Islamic Relief USA's
website describes
itself as one of "16 Islamic Relief legally separate and independent
affiliates (also referred to as 'partner offices') around the world."
"Islamic Relief Worldwide (IRW), a United Kingdom charity, serves as a
catalyst, coordinator and implementer of the Islamic Relief family's relief
and development projects around the globe."
Senior IRW officials have had close ties to the global Islamist Muslim
Brotherhood movement. Among them:
- Mohamed Ashmawey, former
chief executive officer of IRW's board of directors, served
on the executive committee of the Muslim Arab Youth Association
(MAYA), an umbrella group of militant Islamist groups that hosted
conferences featuring radical extremists. Ashmawey also served
as CEO of Islamic Relief USA and ISNA board member.
- Ibrahim El-Zayat, former
chair of IRW's board of trustees, was a representative
of the World
Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY) in Europe, a Saudi
nongovernmental organization that seeks to spread the conservative
Saudi brand of Islam known as Wahhabism. He also is connected to the
Turkish Islamist organization, Milli
Gorus. He is reported
to have told a meeting of Islamists in Germany: "It is still
premature to strike against the Jews and infidels in this
country."
- AbdulWahab Nourwali, a member
of IRW's board of trustees, served
as "a trustee of WAMY for 12 years, administering and operating
the WAMY offices in three major cities in Saudi Arabia with a
strength of 300 employees, as well as running and supervision of 23
overseas bureaus some of which have more than 200 employees,"
his biography said.
- Essam El-Haddad, who quit
his position as IRW trustee in September 2012, became advisor
to Muslim Brotherhood leader and Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi.
El-Haddad also served
on the Muslim Brotherhood's Guidance Bureau.
- Issam Al-Bashir, a former
director of Islamic Relief Worldwide was minister of Guidance and
Religious Endowments for the Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan.
IRW's annual reports available on its website list donations
from terror-tied charities, including:
- Qatar Charity, formerly
the Qatar Charitable Society. It collaborated
with the Hamas Ministry of Education in 2009 to build schools to
indoctrinate children with pro-jihadist propaganda. Osama bin Laden discussed
Qatar Charity in 1993 as an important fundraising source for
al-Qaida.
- Charitable Society for Social Welfare's tax
records
list
now-deceased American-born al-Qaida cleric Anwar
al-Awlaki as vice president. The charity is believed
to have been founded by Shaykh Abd-al-Majid al-Zindani, named
in 2004 by the Treasury Department as a Specially Designated Global
Terrorist.
- International Islamic Charitable Organization is a
Kuwait-based Islamist charity tied
to Global Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader, Yusuf Qaradawi.
The charity allegedly
sent money to "trusted zakat committees" in the
Palestinian territories, many of which have ties to Hamas.
- Al Eslah Yemen. Yemen's
second largest political party, founded in 1990, is affiliated to the
Muslim Brotherhood. Saudi Arabia placed
it on its terrorist blacklist in 2014 Senior party leaders reportedly
have close
ties to terrorist groups such as al-Qaida.
Islamist groups may have succeeded in blocking the DeSantis amendment,
and Islamic Relief USA may continue to receive government grants. Its
history and terror connections, however, are well documented. Those facts
cannot be changed by political pressure campaigns.
Related Topics: Abha
Shankar, Islamic
Relief Worldwide, Islamic
Relief USA, Ron
DeSantis, CAIR,
ISNA,
Iyaz
Ali, Muslim
Brotherhood, Hamas,
Mohamed
Ashmawey, Ibrahim
El-Zayat, AbdulWahab
Nourwali, Essam
El-Haddad, Issam
Al-Bashir, charities
and terror financing
|
The IPT accepts no funding from
outside the United States, or from any governmental agency or political or
religious institutions. Your support of The Investigative Project on
Terrorism is critical in winning a battle we cannot afford to lose. All
donations are tax-deductible. Click here to donate online. The
Investigative Project on Terrorism Foundation is a recognized 501(c)3
organization.
202-363-8602
- main
202-966-5191
- fax
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment