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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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October 3, 2018
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Austria
May Ban Four-Fingered MB Salute
by John Rossomando • Oct 3, 2018
at 6:06 pm
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The Austrian government is considering outlawing a four-fingered salute
representing support for the Muslim Brotherhood. Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan popularized it and began using it after Egypt's
military toppled the Brotherhood in 2013.
Muslim Brotherhood members and sympathizers around the world use the
image on websites, posters and literature. If the ban is approved, anyone
in Austria who flashes the salute could be fined $4,600.
It also has been
used by Muslim Brotherhood supporters in the United States, including
members of Egyptian Americans for Freedom and Justice (EAFJ) and
former Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official Mohamed Elibiary.
Erdogan's role in popularizing the gesture seems to be driving the
Austrian ban. It also would outlaw a wolf-head like salute used by the
pro-Erdogan Turkish fascist group the Grey Wolves. Its most infamous
member, Mehmet Ali Agca, tried to assassinate Pope John Paul II in 1981. The
Wolves have become some of Erdogan's greatest non-Islamist
supporters and aim to unify all Turkic peoples in Turkey across and
throughout Central Asia into a single nation.
It was the only group besides Erdogan's ruling Justice and Development
Party (AKP) that backed constitutional changes allowing him to consolidate
power.
So far Turkey hasn't responded.
Relations between Austria and Turkey have become tense due to reports
that Erdogan's intelligence agency, the MIT, spied on Erdogan's enemies in
Austria. In February 2017, a member of Austria's Green Party alleged that an
umbrella organization headed by the Turkish embassy's religious attaché had
carried out spy operations in Austrian mosques.
Turkey was inserting "unacceptable Turkish government politics in
Austria," said Green Party member Peter Pilz.
Austria closed seven Turkish-linked mosques in June due to
concerns over political Islam. Chancellor Sebastian Kurz complained about
"parallel societies, political Islam and
radicalisation." The Turks responded by accusing the Austrians of racism. The
imams were paid by Turkey's Directorate of Religious Affairs, also
called the Diyanet. It has a close relationship with Turkey's MIT intelligence
agency.
Related Topics: John
Rossomando, Austria,
Muslim
Brotherhood, hand
gestures, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Egyptian
Americans for Freedom and Justice, Grey
Wolves, AKP,
Mehmet
Ali Agca, Peter
Pilz, Sebastian
Kurz, Diyanet
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