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Turkish dealers helping ISIL earn $1 million per day from oil: US Treasury

October 24, 2014 By administrator

WASHINGTON – The Associated Press

n_73423_1This file picture shows oil pump jacks pumping oil at the al-Jbessa oil field in is Syria’s Hasakah governorate. REUTERS Photo

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is earning about $1 million a day from black market oil sales, the United States has said, vowing to impose harsh sanctions on the purchasers of the oil, “including middlemen from Turkey.”

“With the important exception of some state-sponsored terrorist organizations, ISIL is probably the best-funded terrorist organization we have confronted,” David Cohen, U.S. Treasury Department undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in a speech at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington on Oct. 23. “It has amassed wealth at an unprecedented pace.”

ISIL is generating tens of millions of dollars a month through a combination of oil sales, ransom, extortion and other criminal activities, and support from wealthy donors, said Cohen, laying out the most comprehensive outline yet of the U.S. financial strategy against the group.

“It is difficult to get precise revenue estimates … but we estimate that beginning in mid-June, ISIL has earned approximately $1 million a day from oil sales,” Cohen said. Other estimates have ranged as high as $3 million a day.

Middlemen in Turkey

The undersecretary said ISIL was selling oil at substantially discounted prices to a variety of middlemen, including some from Turkey, who then transport the oil to be resold. “It also appears that some of the oil emanating from territory where ISIL operates has been sold to Kurds in Iraq, and then resold into Turkey,” he said.

However, the U.S. official also praised Turkey and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) for being “committed to preventing ISIL-derived oil from crossing their borders.”

He also said U.S.-led airstrikes on ISIL refineries in Syria were also working to threaten the group’s supply networks, dashing a major blow its resources.

Cohen acknowledged, however, that ISIL moves oil in illicit networks outside the formal economy, making it harder to track.

“But at some point, that oil is acquired by someone who operates in the legitimate economy and who makes use of the financial system. He has a bank account. His business may be financed, his trucks may be insured, his facilities may be licensed,” he said.

“We not only can cut them off from the U.S. financial system and freeze their assets, but we can also make it very difficult for them to find a bank anywhere that will touch their money or process their transactions,” he said.

The Treasury also is going after individuals who donate money to ISIL and is urging officials in Qatar and Kuwait to do more to target terror financiers in their countries. A key, he said, is to restrict the militant group’s access to the international financial system.

October/24/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: black market, ISIL, oil, turkish dealers

Turkey wants US-guaranteed interests in Syria: analyst

October 22, 2014 By administrator

383178_Turkish-tanksTurkey seeks US-guaranteed strategic interests in Syria before it joins the so-called US-led coalition on terrorism, a commentator tells Press TV.

Kavork Elmassian, a political commentator from Beirut, in an interview with Press TV on Wednesday said, “Turkey will not enter this so-called US-led coalition on terrorism and on ISIL before it guarantees its strategic interests in Syria.”

Elmassian went on to say, “It is clear that Turkey is the most brutal player in the Syrian conflict. Its intervention has reached not only the northern part of Syria, but also in the central part of Syria by allowing the multi-national terrorists to infiltrate into the Syrian territories.”

He added that Turkey also wants “the elimination of the Kurdish presence from its southern borders.”

The remarks come following the Syrian deputy foreign minister’s statement that Turkey is responsible for the acts of terror that the ISIL Takfiri militants commit in Iraq and Syria and that the relationship between Turkey and the ISIL terrorists is no longer hidden.

Mounting evidence has surfaced recently to confirm the long held suspicion that Turkey is continuing to back the terrorist group.

Britain’s Sky News has obtained documents showing that the Turkish government has stamped passports of foreign militants seeking to cross the Turkish border into Syria.

In addition, German television station ARD reported that there are more than 2,000 militants joining ISIL who come from Europe, clarifying that they enter Istanbul as tourists and then cross borders into Iraq and Syria.

The ISIL terrorists control parts of Syria’s northern territory and have seized swaths of land in Iraq straddling the border between the two countries.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, Syria, Turkey, us-guaranteed

Turkey-ISIL tie no longer hidden: Syria deputy FM

October 19, 2014 By administrator

382818_Syria-MiqdadSyria’s deputy foreign minister says Turkey is responsible for the acts of terror that the ISIL Takfiri militants commit in Iraq and Syria. Reported presstv

“Turkey is not a part of the solution, but a basic part of the problem,” Faisal Miqdad was quoted as saying in an article published on Lebanon’s al-Binaa newspaper on Saturday.

“The relationship between the Turkish regime and the ISIS (ISIL) terrorists is no longer hidden,” he added.

Miqdad also commented on Turkey’s failure in a third round of run-off voting for the second of the two Western seats on the UN Security Council.

“Turkey’s failure to have support of UN states to gain a non-permanent seat on Security Council last Thursday is a clear expression of the world’s rejection of the Turkish policies against Syria and Iraq and its ally with the ISIS terrorist organization.”

Turkey has been accused of backing ISIL in Syria. The Turkish government continues to block the supply of military equipment and reinforcements for Kurdish fighters defending Syria’s strategic border town of Kobani against the terrorists.

Ankara prevents Turkish Kurds from crossing the border into Kobani to join the Kurds in the battle for the town.

“The friends of Turkey, particularly the US administration and its security bodies and the European and Arab colleagues of (Turkish President) Erdogan and (Prime Minister) Davutoglu became convinced that it is impossible to continue supporting the Turkish leadership’s involvement in backing terrorism, including the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terrorist organization and other branches of al-Qaeda terrorist organization,” the Syrian official argued.

ISIL has added further reinforcements to its ranks in an effort to break the resistance of Kurdish fighters.

So

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: ISIL, Syria, tie, Turkey

Pro- and anti-ISIL students clash at Turkish universities

October 13, 2014 By administrator

194559_newsdetailA series of tense incidents has taken place at some of Turkey’s universities, including İstanbul University and the Middle East Technical University (ODTÜ), over the past couple of weeks as pro- and anti-Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) groups of students continue to clash. Today ZAMAN report

Twenty-seven pro-ISIL students were detained by police after a quarrel erupted with anti-ISIL students at İstanbul University’s faculty of economics and administrative sciences on Monday.

The pro-ISIL students, who reportedly had their faces covered, wearing black hats and holding sticks, were heard shouting phrases like, “We are Muslim students,” as they were taken to police vehicles. Nine of the detained students are allegedly affiliated with Muslim Youths Association which is known for its radical Islamist tendencies.

The detained students were taken to the İstanbul Police Department’s anti-terror office for interrogation after undergoing health checks at a hospital.

Some anti-ISIL students at the university’s campus issued a press statement after the attack, saying: “We, students of the İstanbul University, have been subject to the aggression of ISIL supporters who have blood on their hands. ISIL militants are known for their aggression. They murder children and rape women in Rojava and Kobani. Those pro-ISIL ‘so-called’ students with black masks attacked us with sticks.”

The Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government has been the target of criticism for failing to act against ISIL to save Kobani. Violent protests against ISIL attacks and AK Party policy led to the deaths of 34 people last week

The anti-ISIL students also accused the AK Party government for failing to act against ISIL activity in Turkey and blamed university security for doing nothing to halt the attack. “Look at those people. They come to our university and make propaganda in favor of ISIL without any prevention. They get their power from the AK Party. The government is sending truckloads of guns to the ISIL gangs to murder people in Rojava. We would not be surprised if ISIL militants organize attacks on Turkish cities,” the students said.

On Oct. 1, three pro-ISIL students were detained by police after a quarrel erupted between students at the university. The students who were attacked said pro-ISIL students came after them while they were hanging anti-ISIL banners around the campus.

On Oct. 4, a fight again erupted after pro-ISIL students attacked another group holding an anti-ISIL protest inside the university.

In a seperate case on Oct. 10, a student of İstanbul’s prestigious Boğaziçi University and the grandson of famed lawyer Nejat Ağırnaslı was killed while fighting against the terrorist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

The sociology graduate student had joined the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) to fight against the terrorist group in the Turkish-Syrian border town of Kobani, where battles have raged over the past few weeks. The 30-year-old man traveled to the region as a member of the Marxist-Leninist Communist Party (MLKP) and was one of many who have been crossing the border to take up arms against ISIL forces.

His father, Hikmet Cur, released a statement saying: “I lost my son, my comrade, my Nejat, in Kobani. Although he had a very bright future, he chose revolutionary solidarity. He kept his promise. He has not let me down.” He went on to say, “I bow down to him with respect.”

Meanwhile, police used water cannons and tear gas on Oct. 9 to disperse demonstrations held at two universities in Ankara in protest ISIL attacks on the Syrian-Kurdish town of Kobani. At ODTÜ, demonstrators who wanted to march from the university to the Ankara office of the ruling AK Party were blocked by police at the school’s gate. Police used water cannons and tear gas to disperse the crowd.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, students, Turkey

PressTV: ISIL opens 1st consulate in Turkish capital

October 3, 2014 By administrator

isil-consulateThe ISIL Takfiri terrorists have purportedly opened a consulate in Turkey and use it to issue visas for those who want to join the fight against the Syrian and Iraqi governments.

The Turkish daily Aydinlik said in a recent report that the consulate was founded in the Cankaya district of the capital Ankara.

The militants are said to be operating freely inside the country without much problem.

Other reports said the members of the Takfiri group have rented luxurious houses in the upscale neighborhood of the capital and Istanbul and use them for residence or as offices.

The terrorists are said to be using minibuses with black windows to get around the city.

The ISIL Takfiri terrorists currently control parts of Syria and Iraq. They have threatened all communities, including Shias, Sunnis, Kurds, Christians, Izadi Kurds and others, as they continue their atrocities in Iraq.

Senior Iraqi officials have blamed Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and some Persian Gulf Arab states for the growing terrorism in their country.

The terrorist group has links with Saudi intelligence and is believed to be indirectly supported by the Israeli regime.

The United States started conducting airstrikes on the ISIL only after US interests were threatened by the militants.

Presstv

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, consulate, ISIL, open

Turkey seeks to annex part of Syria: Analyst Saab Shaath (Video)

October 3, 2014 By administrator

Davutoglu-NATO-ISISTurkey pursues a policy aimed at bringing a part of Syrian territory under its control, says a Middle East expert, Press TV reports.

“Turkey wants to carve up areas [in Syria] and wants to annex it for itself. Turkey is more active than the Americans in this war in support of ISIL, not in fighting them,” said Saab Shaath, an author and Middle East expert from Belfast, told Press TV in an interview on Wednesday.

“Turkey has been involved in [supporting] ISIL from the very beginning; they supplied, trained, opened their borders for ISIL, organized resources for them, and [Turkey] even sells their oil to them. Turkey is the godfather of ISIL,” Shaath said.

The US and its allies, including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Jordan, have been conducting airstrikes against the ISIL inside Syria since September 22, without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate.

The airstrikes are an extension of the US-led aerial campaign against ISIL positions in Iraq.

The ISIL terrorists currently control large swathes of territory across Syria and Iraq. They have carried out heinous atrocities in both countries, including mass executions and beheadings of people.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: annex, ISIL, Syria, Turkey

Turkey 49 hostages swapped for 180 ISIL terrorists, report claims

October 2, 2014 By administrator

193762_newsdetail

The report also stated that the state’s key bodies, the MİT, the Prime Ministry Office and the President’s Office, competed against each other in an effort to give the impression that the hostage release was the result of their diplomatic attempts. In order to create this perception, the three agencies used certain media outlets affiliated with each other to claim the result as its own success. This prompted rumors that an internal power struggle was taking place over the hostages.

The terrorist group the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) released 49 hostages who were abducted from the Turkish Consulate General in Mosul in June in exchange for Turkey’s release of 180 key figures from the jihadist group, the Taraf daily reported on Thursday.

Forty-nine members of the consulate staff were held hostage by ISIL for 101 days before being released on Sept. 20, but speculation as to how they were freed continues to occupy the country’s agenda. Taraf claimed that a number of key ISIL figures were traded for the hostages.

Giving a detailed report on the hostage release, Taraf claimed that US air strikes on ISIL militants in Iraq in August resulted in wounded terrorists being sent to Turkey for treatment. The US then warned Turkey not to release those militants. But, ISIL said they would kill the hostages if those ISIL fighters were not allowed to return to Iraq and Syria. The Turkish government then developed a swap plan for the release of the hostages, simultaneously ridding Turkey of the ISIL elements and releasing the hostages.

Local tribes mediated for swap deal

Local tribal figures who are providing support to the US’s campaign against ISIL in Iraq acted as mediators in the exchange process. With their help a deal was reached and the logistics were finalized. The ISIL militants would bring the hostages to the Turkish border and inform the National Intelligence Organization (MİT) of the hostages’ location, the report said.

In the wake of the hostages’ return, the government, in accordance with the deal, gathered ISIL militants who had been detained during medical treatment in Turkish hospitals. One hundred eighty fighters were then taken to a military post in Van. Whether the ISIL terrorists who killed a police officer, a military officer and a Turkish citizen in Niğde province in March were included in the swap deal is not clear. However, rumors circulating in government circles indicate that these terrorists were meant to be among the terrorists to be exchanged; however, the decision was abandoned, Taraf reported.

As part of the deal, the returned militants were given an undisclosed amount of money before they were handed over to ISIL.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: hostages, ISIL, swapped, Turkey

ISIL beheads 10 Kurds, 7 men and 3 women, west of Kobani

October 1, 2014 By administrator

REUTERS / BEIRUT

193669_newsdetailThe ISIL in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) beheaded seven men and three women in a northern Kurdish area of Syria, a human rights monitoring group said on Wednesday, part of what it described as a campaign to frighten residents resisting the militant group’s advance.

The head of the Syrian Observatory for Human, Rights Rami Abdulrahman, said five anti-ISIL Kurdish fighters, including three women, and four Syrian Arab rebels were detained and beheaded on Tuesday 14 kilometers (8 miles) west of Kobani, a Kurdish town besieged by ISIL near the Turkish border.

He said a Kurdish male civilian was also beheaded. “I don’t know why they were arrested or beheaded. Only the ISIL knows why. They want to scare people,” he said.

Reuters could not independently verify the information.

ISIL fighters have carried out several beheadings of enemy fighters and civilians in Syria and Iraq.

The beheadings are often carried out in public and with a message that any violent or non-violent dissent with not be tolerated.

When fighting Sunni Mulsim tribes in eastern Syria, ISIL have used beheadings to scare local leaders to withdraw from the battlefield. ISIL has also beheaded foreign journalists and an aid worker.

Major tribe joins fight against ISIL

In the meantime, Iraqi Kurdish troops drove ISIL fighters from a strategic border crossing with Syria and won the support of members of a major Sunni tribe, in one of the biggest successes since US forces began bombing the Islamists.

The victory, which could make it harder for militants to operate on both sides of the frontier, was also achieved with help from Kurds from the Syrian side of the frontier, a new sign of cooperation across the border.

Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighters took control of the Rabia border crossing in a battle that began before dawn, an Iraqi Kurdish political source said.

“It’s the most important strategic point for crossing,” the source said.

The participation of Sunni tribal fighters in the battle against ISIL could prove as important a development as the advance itself.

Members of the influential Shammar tribe, one of the largest in northwestern Iraq, joined the Kurds in the fighting, a tribal figure said.

“Rabia is completely liberated. All of the Shammar are with the Peshmerga, and there is full cooperation between us,” Abdullah Yawar, a leading member of the tribe, told Reuters.

He said the cooperation was the result of an agreement with the president of Iraq’s Kurdish region after three months of negotiation to join forces against the “common enemy.”

Gaining support from Sunni tribes, many of which either supported or acquiesced in ISIL’s June advance, would be a crucial objective for the Iraqi government and its regional and Western allies in the fight against the insurgents.

 

Winning over Sunni tribes

Winning over Sunni tribes was a central part of the strategy that helped the US military defeat a precursor of ISIL during the “surge” campaign of 2006-2007. Washington hopes the new Iraqi government can repeat it.

Rabia controls the main highway linking Syria to Mosul, the biggest city in northern Iraq, which ISIL fighters captured in June at the start of a lightning advance through Iraq’s Sunni Muslim north that jolted the Middle East.

Twelve ISIL fighters’ bodies lay on the border at the crossing after the battle, Hemin Hawrami, head of the foreign relations department of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, one of the main Iraqi Kurdish parties, said on Twitter.

Syrian Kurdish fighters said they had also joined the battle: “We are defending Rabia … trying to coordinate action with the Peshmerga against ISIL,” said Saleh Muslim, head of the Syria-based Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD).

If Rabia can be held, its recapture is one of the biggest successes since US-led forces started bombing ISIL targets in Iraq in August.

It is one of two main border crossings between militant-held parts of the two countries, control of which has allowed ISIL to declare a single Caliphate on both sides.

The ability to cross the frontier freely has been a major tactical advantage for ISIL fighters on both sides. Fighters swept from Syria into northern Iraq in June and returned with heavy weapons seized from fleeing Iraqi government troops, which they have used to expand their territory in Syria.

Washington expanded the campaign to Syria last week in an effort to defeat the fighters who have swept through Sunni areas of both countries, killing prisoners, chasing out Kurds and ordering Shi’ites and non-Muslims to convert or die.

The United States hopes the strikes, conducted with help from European allies in Iraq and Arab air forces in Syria, will allow government and Kurdish forces in Iraq, and moderate Sunnis in Syria, to recapture territory.

But a wave of car bomb and mortar bomb attacks in Shi’ite areas of Baghdad, suspected to be the work of ISIL fighters, were a reminder of risks. Iraqi police and medical sources said at least 35 people were killed.

Britain said its Tornado warplanes had launched their first attacks against ISIL in Iraq since parliament approved combat operations last Friday, targeting a heavy weapons position that was endangering Kurdish forces and subsequently attacking an IS armed pick-up truck in the same area.

In Iraq, a coalition of Iraqi army, Shi’ite militia fighters and Kurdish troops known as Peshmerga have been slowly recapturing Sunni villages that had been under ISIL control south of the Kurdish-held oil city of Kirkuk.

Peshmerga liberated two villages 40 km south of Kirkuk from ISIL on Tuesday, an Iraqi security official said.

Peshmerga secretary-general Jabbar Yawar estimated the Iraqi Kurds had now retaken around half the territory they lost when the militants surged north towards the regional capital Arbil in early August, an advance that helped to prompt the US strikes.

Peshmerga fighters, Iraqi army troops and pro-government militia were advancing north from the Peshmerga-held city of Tuz Khurmatu to drive ISIL fighters out of the countryside that surrounds Kirkuk, the official said. He credited US-led air strikes with helping the Peshmerga clear the two villages.

“This area witnessed intense air strikes from US-led strikes and Iraqi air strikes overnight and at dawn,” the official said.

The explosions shook Kirkuk itself: “We felt the ground shaking beneath our feet, and then we heard that there were air strikes outside Kirkuk,” said a policeman in the city.

In addition to aiding the Kurds in the north, US air strikes have targeted fighters west of Baghdad and on its southern outskirts.

“We believe the US air strikes have helped in containing ISIL’s momentum,” said lawmaker Mowaffak al-Rubaie, a former head of Iraq’s advisory security council.

Iraqi officials said US air strikes, along with strikes by Iraq’s own aircraft, had killed dozens of ISIL fighters the previous day south of the capital.

“It appears that 67 (ISIL) militants were killed in Fadiliya,” said an Iraqi security source, referring to a town south of the capital.

The US military said it had conducted 11 air strikes in Syria and the same number in Iraq in the previous 24 hours, on ISIL tanks, artillery, checkpoints and buildings.

ISIL fighters have laid siege to Kobani, a Kurdish city on Syria’s border with Turkey. Sporadic gunfire could be heard from across the frontier, and a shell could be seen exploding in olive groves on the western outskirts of town.

A steady stream of people, mostly men, were crossing the border post back into Syria, apparently to help defend the town.

Ocalan Iso, deputy commander of the Kurdish forces defending the town, told Reuters Kurdish troops had battled ISIL fighters armed with tanks through the night and into Tuesday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a body that monitors the war with a network on the ground, said US-led strikes had hit ISIL positions west of Kobani.

The Observatory said ISIL now controls 325 out of 354 villages on the rural outskirts of Kobani.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: beheading, ISIL, Kurd

Turkey, Journalists critical of gov’t targeted with violent imagery

September 25, 2014 By administrator

193181_newsdetailAn editor at the Islamist magazine Sancaktar, Eyüp Gökhan Özekin, shared an image of Uslu wearing an orange prisoner suit while he appeared to be waiting to be beheaded by Chairman of the Humanitarian Aid Foundation (İHH) Bülent Yıldırım

TODAY’S ZAMAN / ISTANBUL 

Two Turkish journalists critical of the government have been targeted by pro-government journalists through the sharing of altered images on the Internet showing the journalists as the victims of the terrorist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

Taraf and Today’s Zaman columnist Emre Uslu and Editor-in-Chief of Today’s Zaman Bülent Keneş have been the subjects of photoshopped images on the Internet that could be considered a hate crime, since ISIL’s atrocities are used as a tool to criticize these two journalists who are skeptical of the government.

An editor at the Islamist magazine Sancaktar, Eyüp Gökhan Özekin, shared an image of Uslu wearing an orange prisoner suit while he appeared to be waiting to be beheaded by Chairman of the Humanitarian Aid Foundation (İHH) Bülent Yıldırım. Uslu has become a target after he questioned the alleged ties between ISIL and the İHH, which is the organization that organized the Mavi Marmara flotilla campaign to Gaza which resulted in the killing of eight Turkish citizens by Israeli forces in international waters. In the image Uslu is portrayed as a prisoner of ISIL, while Yıldırım is depicted as an ISIL militant. The Sancaktar editor criticized Uslu for calling the İHH an ISIL supporter.

The same image was also shared by Adem Özköse, an Islamist journalist who works for the state channel TRT.

Sancaktar, which takes an Islamist editorial line, was recently in the news after the education minister visited the magazine at the beginning of the school year in September.

Keneş was also a target of the pro-government Twitter users after a columnist, Turgay Güler, from the staunchly pro-government daily Akşam, wrote that he wished it was Keneş who was taken hostage by ISIL due to Keneş’s criticism of the government’s handling of the recent hostage crisis in Iraq. After the release of the 46 Turkish hostages, Keneş criticized the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government for its negligence in the first place that led to a 102-day-long imprisonment for the hostages.

Similar to Uslu, Keneş was portrayed in a photoshopped image as an ISIL victim waiting to be beheaded by a militant wearing black.

In the face of growing concern for sympathy towards ISIL among Turks, these images being circulated in social media led to fears of approval by the Turkish public of the atrocities by the extremist ISIL. A recent poll indicated that almost 10 percent of the population in Turkey does not consider ISIL a terrorist organization.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, turkish journalists

Turkey’s TİKA funding radical Islamists?

September 25, 2014 By administrator

e-uslu-b-1

By EMRE USLU

e.uslu@todayszaman.com

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) likes to take special pride in the Turkish Cooperation and Development Agency (TİKA). This agency is implementing various projects in different places around the world. It restores historic monuments and lends support to civil society organizations (CSOs). TİKA projects even make Turkey the third-largest assistance-providing country after the US and UK. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recently spoke of this fact as a source of pride during his visit to the US.

The TİKA projects were generally advertised as efforts to revive historic monuments that were legacies of the Ottoman Empire. For instance, Fatih Sultan Mehmet Mosque, Kosovo’s largest mosque, in Pristina, was renovated thanks to a TİKA project. In Kosovo, there are dozens of mosques that have been repaired by TİKA. They are financing these projects with our taxes, but this expenditure is sufficiently justified.

Whom does TİKA really help? The answer to this question can be found in the recent crackdown on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and the al-Nusra Front in Kosovo. A few days ago, the Kosovo police launched an operation against radical Islamic groups in the country. Thirty imams were taken into custody on charges of sending jihadists to Syria and Iraq. Many of them were arrested. Sixteen foundations and associations were shut down on charges of aiding and abetting members of ISIL, the al-Nusra Front and other al-Qaeda-linked organizations.

The key figure arrested on charges of aiding these organizations is Şefçet Kraniçi, the imam of Pristina’s Fatih Sultan Mehmet Mosque, which was renovated by TİKA. This amounts to repairing the mosque with funds from Turkish taxpayers and then delivering the mosque to radical Islamic groups.

But this is only the tip of the iceberg. Others taken into custody included other people working at TİKA-funded mosques.

Some might suggest that TİKA’s duty is to renovate mosques, and it cannot meddle in the process of assigning imams or officials to those mosques. But it is not so simple. We are talking about Kosovo, and one of the most dominant rivalries is between Hanafism/Maturidism and Salafism. In Kosovo, Hanafi clerics are being purged and replaced with Salafi clerics. Moreover, this plan is supported by Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate (Diyanet) as well as TİKA and the Yunus Emre Foundation.

There is more to the crackdown by the Kosovo police on ISIL and the al-Nusra Front. Many of the CSOs backed by TİKA and the Yunus Emre Foundation in Kosovo were closed down during this operation.

The largest of them is the Association for Culture, Education and School (AKEA), which was frequently visited by Ahmet Davutoğlu in the past.

AKEA was established in 2004 by Husamedin Abazi, who was trained in Riyadh. The leading figures linked with this association are Behar Avdiu, Nhari Toska, Bashkim Mehani, Ilir Xhoxhaj and Ilir Gashi. All of them are connected in some way or other to Turkey’s AKP or affiliated organizations. Many observers have defined AKEA as the Kosovo branch of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB). But the significant majority of imams who were arrested on charges of aiding and abetting ISIL are “volunteer members” of AKEA.

AKEA’s founder, Abazi, was frequently hosted by organizations that are close to the AKP in İstanbul, such as the Humanitarian Aid Foundation (İHH) and Fatih Sultan Mehmet University (not to be confused with Fatih University).

There may be a link between CSOs close to the AKP and radical Islamic groups. That is a matter of choice. But when it comes to how our taxes are spent, we, as citizens, are entitled to question it.

AKEA is an organization that is financed by TİKA, and with the support of Kürşat Mamat as TİKA’s Kosovo representative, it has recently become Kosovo’s most effective CSO.

Gashi, the head of AKEA’s Prizren branch, openly acknowledges TİKA’s support for AKEA. “We conduct our joint activities generally with TİKA and the İHH. We cooperated with TİKA in cultural matters and with the İHH in humanitarian aid operations, and our cooperation continues. Moreover, we have hosted many intellectuals, columnists and writers from Turkey. We were honored to host Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, who paid a visit to our association during his official talks in Kosovo, as well as other dignitaries such as Mustafa Özel, Mustafa İslamoğlu and Abdullah Yıldız, and other academics, journalists and municipal managers” (Aug. 16, 2012).

The state-owned Yunus Emre Foundation admits its relations with AKEA on its official website. For instance, the “Islamic Arts Exhibition” was a joint project between the Yunus Emre Foundation and AKEA. At the opening of the Sixth Islamic Art Photography Exhibition, which included 14 photographers, the values of Islam were presented to Prizren. Fifty-one works by 14 photographers were put on display at the Prizren Yunus Emre Turkish Culture Center through cooperation between AKEA and the Yunus Emre Turkish Culture Center. Many other activities were jointly organized between Turkey’s public institutions and radical Islamic organizations such as AKEA. And these activities were funded by our taxes.

The ruling AKP is doing everything to ensure the closure of Turkish schools — which are run by Turkish entrepreneurs inspired by the ideas of well-respected Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen — but if AKEA, frequented by Davutoğlu, has been closed down on charges of ties with ISIL and al-Qaeda, then we, as citizens, have the right to ask: Are you financing radical Islamists with our taxes?

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: imam, ISIL, Kosovo, mosques, TİKA, Turkey

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