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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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July 3, 2018
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Dar
al-Hijrah, Turkish Government Mosque, Rally for Tariq Ramadan
by John Rossomando • Jul 3, 2018
at 12:02 pm
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Two Washington, D.C. area mosques hosted programs last weekend calling
for the release of celebrity Islamist Tariq Ramadan, who has been in a French jail since February on rape charges.
He is the grandson of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna.
Rallies at Virginia's Dar al-Hijrah Islamic Center and the Turkish
government run Diyanet Center in Lanham, Md. were sponsored by the Aafia Foundation. It is named for convicted Pakistani terrorist Aafia Siddiqui, aka
"Lady Al-Qaida," a Pakistani convicted of opening fire on U.S. soldiers in
Afghanistan.
The foundation also led a march Monday to the French Embassy in Washington demanding
Ramadan's release.
Though a French court cleared him of raping one of the women last month,
France considers Ramadan a flight risk. He remains imprisoned
pending the outcome of the investigation into the other women's allegations.
Aafia Foundation president Mauri Saalakhan, an anti-Semitic conspiracy theorist who defended former Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, moderated the weekend programs.
Dar al-Hijrah has long been suspected of having ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and
has been home
to numerous terrorism suspects. Imam Sheikh Shaker Elsayed, known for defending female genital mutilation last year, defended
Ramadan.
"His enemies know his value and his effectiveness, and that's why
they acted swiftly," Elsayed said.
Ramadan's case is a "cause for every Muslim," Elsayed said.
"We know that every Muslim leader in the West has a sign on his
back and forehead saying [they are] a target. If not by Western
intelligence, by those who are afraid of Islam and there are some who are
Islamophobes," Elsayed said. "Do not let your leaders fall. When they do,
our community falls right behind."
Shelina Merani, a friend of Ramadan's who spoke at both rallies, called him a "political prisoner" who is
being treated like a terrorist. Saalakhan compared Ramadan's case to
Siddiqui's, saying both are falsely accused.
"The only thing that comes close to what we are dealing with this
case of what's going on with Dr. Tariq Ramadan is that of Dr. Aafia
Siddiqui," Saalakhan said. "It's the only other issue that comes
close."
Once again we have a case of pro-terrorist radicals working together to
circle the wagons around one of their own.
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