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by Uzay Bulut • October 19, 2018
at 5:00 am
- According to Turkish
media reports, the Turkish government's Directorate of
Religious Affairs (Diyanet) gathered intelligence via
its imams and other employees in 38 countries on the
activities of Turks suspected of supporting the US-based
Turkish Islamic cleric Fethullah Gülen.
- Peter Pilz, then an
Austrian member of parliament, last year revealed that he had
received documents from a Turkish source indicating the
existence of "a global network of informants" --
spanning four continents -- reporting to Turkey's Diyanet
on alleged Gülenists. In most cases, these informants were
religion attachés at embassies and consulates.
- In 2016, the Diyanet
Center of America (DCA) completed the construction of a $110
million mosque complex in Lanham, Maryland. According to the
DCA website, "The result is a small village that will be
an important cultural hub for all visitors and residents of
Washington DC area." Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan inaugurated the complex, one of many Diyanet-affiliated
mosques in North America.
- The Trump
administration should be on guard. If Erdogan's mosques in
Europe, Africa, Australia and Asia are being used as a conduit
to spy on Turkish nationals who possibly oppose his rule, is
it not safe to assume that similar activity has been going on
in the United States?

If Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's mosques in Europe, Africa,
Australia and Asia are being used as a conduit to spy on Turkish
nationals who possibly oppose his rule, is it not safe to assume
that similar activity has been going on in the United States, for
example, at the $110 million Diyanet Center of America mosque
complex (pictured at left) near Washington, D.C.? (Image sources:
Diyanet Center - DBull360/Wikimedia Commons; Erdogan - Getty
Images)
According to Turkish media reports, the Turkish
government's Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet)
gathered intelligence via its imams and other employees in 38
countries on the activities of Turks suspected of supporting the
US-based Turkish Islamic cleric Fethullah Gülen, whom Turkey's
government accuses of organizing a failed coup attempt in July
2016. Diyanet reportedly requested from its branches abroad
to submit their findings in time for the 9th Eurasia Islamic
Council, which took place in October 2016. These findings were then
reportedly submitted to the "Coup Commission" of the
Turkish parliament (TBMM).
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