By John Wayne on Thursday, 02 May 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

The Call for Sharia Law, By Richard Miller (London)

I have previously covered material about the call for sharia law, fundamentalist Islamic law, in Europe. As an addition to this, it is noted that there was a recent march by Muslims through Hamburg, Germany of around 1,000 people, calling for the establishment of an Islamic caliphate in Germany. The details are below, but the political significance is clear, that it is early days yet, and as numbers increase, there will be even more confidence in pushing for this sharia law agenda.

It is somewhat self-defeating for the mass immigration lobby to suppose that this is the way to ensure that they get their pensions in old age. It is just not going to happen.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/04/28/protesters-call-for-islamic-state-in-germany/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email#:~:text=More%20than%201%2C000%20people%20marched,calls%20for%20an%20Islamic%20state.

"More than 1,000 people marched through Hamburg on Saturday calling for a caliphate in Germany.

Protesters gathered in the northern city for a mostly peaceful demonstration against Islamophobia, but among the masses were calls for an Islamic state.

Joe Adade Boateng, leader of Muslim Interaktiv which organised the march, said in a speech at the march that Germany needed a "righteous caliphate" to remedy the misrepresentation Muslim groups have faced in the media.

He was greeted with cheers of "Allahu akbar", or God is great, by a mostly male crowd, some of whom were holding up signs reading "Caliphate is the solution" and "Stop the media hate".

People were also holding up copies of the local tabloid newspaper, Bild, with stories about Islam that had been smeared with red paint.

Since war broke out between Israel and Hamas, Muslim groups have criticised Germany's strong support for Tel Aviv.

At times that criticism has led to calls for more radical action, with Islamist groups flourishing on German social media.

Muslim Interaktiv, a group under investigation by Hamburg's domestic intelligence for "extremism", has grown to 24,000 followers on TikTok. Leader Boateng calls himself "Raheem Boateng" online and posts videos explaining why homosexuality is a sin.

The group had previously organised a demonstration of 3,500 people against the public burning of the Koran in Sweden in February last year, and held an anti-Israel demonstration following the Hamas attacks on October 7.

Speaking earlier this month, Andy Grote, the Hamburg interior senator from the Social Democratic Party, singled out Muslim Interaktiv as he called for "hard and decisive action" to be taken against Islamic extremists.

Lamya Kaddor, a Green MP, described the group as "not only very dangerous, but also a completely marginal group among Germany's Muslims" that have taken advantage "of the Gaza issue".

Volker Beck, the president of the German-Israeli Society, asked why the group had not been banned for their connections with Hizb ut-Tahrir.

The calls for the government to take action against the group comes as politicians have been reluctant to soften support for Israel despite other world leaders saying that its army has been too aggressive in its war in Gaza and has caused a humanitarian disaster.

Germany has been accused of suppressing free speech and imperilling democracy with bans on protests since October 7.

Yanis Varoufakis, the outspoken former Greek finance minister, and Ghassan Abu Sittah, a doctor who was in Gaza for the first few months of the war, said Germany risked damaging its reputation internationally.

Mr Varoufakis's lawyer said he has documents that show his client has been banned from Germany after he was due to speak at a pro-Palestine congress in Berlin that was cancelled by authorities.

The German ambassador to Pakistan was greeted by protests on Saturday, with demonstrators "shocked by the audacity that you are here to talk about civil rights while your country is brutally abusing the people speaking for the rights of the Palestinians".

Earlier this month Nicaragua asked the UN's International Court of Justice to stop German weapons sales to Israel, claiming Berlin had breached the UN genocide convention with its supply of arms." 

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