http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article7078771.ece

The Sunday Times

March 28, 2010


Saudis fund Balkan Muslims spreading hate of the West


Muslims stage a protest against the publication of cartoons of Prophet 
Mohammed

Muslims stage a protest against the publication of cartoons of Prophet 
Mohammed

Bojan Pancevski in Skopje

 
SAUDI ARABIA is pouring hundreds of millions of pounds into Islamist 
groups in the Balkans, some of which spread hatred of the West and 
recruit fighters for jihad in Afghanistan.

According to officials in Macedonia, Islamic fundamentalism threatens to 
destabilise the Balkans. Strict Wahhabi and Salafi factions funded by 
Saudi organisations are clashing with traditionally moderate local 
Muslim communities.

Fundamentalists have financed the construction of scores of mosques and 
community centres as well as handing some followers up to £225 a month. 
They are expected not only to grow beards but also to persuade their 
wives to wear the niqab, or face veil, a custom virtually unknown in the 
liberal Islamic tradition of the Balkans.

Government sources in traditionally secular Macedonia (official title 
the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia), said they were monitoring up 
to 50 Al-Qaeda volunteers recruited to fight in Afghanistan.
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Classified documents seen by The Sunday Times reveal that Macedonian 
officials are also investigating a number of Islamic charities, some in 
Saudi Arabia, which are active throughout the Balkans and are suspected 
of spreading extremism and laundering money for terrorist organisations.

One of the groups under scrutiny is the International Islamic Relief 
Organisation from Saudi Arabia, which is on a United Nations blacklist 
of organisations backing terrorism. It did not respond to inquiries, but 
has previously denied involvement in terrorist activities, calling such 
claims “totally unfounded”.

According to its website, it works in 32 countries to provide relief to 
the victims of natural disasters and to carry out humanitarian, health 
and educational projects.

“Hundreds of millions have been poured into Macedonia alone in the past 
decade and most of it comes from Saudi Arabia,” said a government 
source. “The Saudis’ main export seems to be ideology, not oil.”

Sulejman Rexhepi, leader of the Islamic community in Macedonia, said a 
number of mosques had been forcibly taken over by radical groups. Four 
in central Skopje are no longer under the control of the official 
Islamic authorities. New imams claim they have been “spontaneously” 
installed by the “people”.

“Their so-called Wahhabi teachings are completely alien to our 
traditions and to the essence of Islam, which is a tolerant and 
inclusive religion,” said Rexhepi.

In some mosques believers are being told that Macedonia, which sent 200 
soldiers to Iraq and Afghanistan, has been tricked into supporting a 
crusade against Islam spearheaded by Britain and America. Radical 
clerics have shown footage from Afghanistan, Iraq and the Palestinian 
territories to illustrate their claims that the West is waging war on Islam.

Rahman, a 35-year-old cab driver from Skopje, Macedonia’s capital, said 
he had stopped going to his local mosque since it was taken over by 
extremists. “Following the Haiti earthquake the new imam said God would 
punish the West for their wars in Afghanistan and Iraq with natural 
disasters,” he said.

Bekir Halimi, an imam trained in Syria, runs Bamiresia, an Islamic 
charity that has been investigated for alleged terrorist links and money 
laundering. Police raided its offices but failed to find any evidence of 
terrorist links.

“We are fully entitled to receive funding from both governmental and 
non-governmental organisations from Saudi Arabia,” said Halimi, who 
refuses to name the sources of his funding but rejects any suggestion of 
criminal activity.

Macedonia’s law enforcement agencies warn that the European Union and 
America have failed to recognise the growing problem of Islamic 
extremism in the Balkans.

Baroness Ashton, the EU foreign policy chief, has declared stability in 
the region to be her top priority, but local politicians complain that 
the EU and Nato are reducing their presence in troublespots such as 
Bosnia and Kosovo.

Last month, Bosnian security forces raided a village strongly influenced 
by Salafi extremists and found a weapons cache.

In raids elsewhere rifles, bombs and rocket-propelled grenades have been 
uncovered.

The West has put considerable political and financial efforts into 
helping build democracy in Bosnia following its civil war in the 1990s. 
Saudi organisations have also asserted considerable influence, giving 
more than £450m to build more than 150 mosques and Islamic centres.

In Macedonia, Fatmir, a former disc jockey, explained how he became an 
adherent of Salafism. The father of two has grown a beard and instructed 
his wife to wear a niqab. He now makes his living by selling Islamist 
literature. “Ours is the Islam of the 21st century,” he said.

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