EXTREMISTS ESTABLISH FOOTHOLD IN THE BALKANS
Peace TV, an enterprise directed from INDIA, SAUDI ARABIA, and DUBAI by a fundamentalist Islamist preacher, Zakir Naik, has established a 12-hour daily program in KOSOVO, a country 90% Muslim.
The entry into KOSOVO of Naik's
Peace TV, broadcasting each day in ALBANIAN from 9:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., appears
to be an element in a novel campaign by SOUTH ASIAN Islamists to establish a
foothold among EUROPE'S indigenous BALKAN Muslims. Peace TV's message is hard-line
Wahhabism, which insults, in
aggressive terms, spiritual Sufis, Shia
Muslims, non-fundamentalist Sunnis,
Jews, Christians, and Hindus,
among others. Radical Islamist interlopers and their financiers, mainly from SAUDI
ARABIA and other Gulf states, have also been relocating to MACEDONIA, BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA,
MONTENEGRO, and SERBIA.
Peace TV is coordinated in KOSOVO by
a local "Center for Islamic Studies,"
which appears to exist only online and via television – and, in addition to
Naik's propaganda, offers academic studies and fatwas [religious
opinions]. The "Center" also does not identify its officials or
financing – except for its link to Naik.
The channel, via satellite,
broadcasts mostly in English and Urdu, to audiences in SOUTH ASIA and SOUTH
ASIAN Muslim immigrant communities elsewhere, and into KOSOVO since 2009.
Naik, a physician with no Islamic
religious training, has praised terrorism – including that of the late Osama
Bin Laden; both he and his efforts have been condemned by Indian Muslim authorities.
He was banned from entry into BRITAIN in 2010, after which his multiple-entry
visa to CANADA was cancelled.
Peace TV now includes interviews in
the ALBANIAN language with Kosovo Muslim figures under the influence of Wahhabism. Previously, Peace TV
featured lectures by Sabri Bajgora, named "chief imam" of the Balkan
republic by Naim Tërnava, KOSOVO'S Wahhabi
supreme Islamic cleric since 2003.
PEACE TV PROPOSED THE ERECTION OF A WAHHABI
"MEGA-MOSQUE" IN PRISHTINA
Bajgora has been the focus of
several controversial incidents in the KOSOVO Islamic community. In 2011, for
example, Tërnava, Bajgora and two other Muslim functionaries were denounced by
seven highly-qualified and notably-moderate professors who had been dismissed
without cause from KOSOVO'S Faculty of Islamic Studies.
The expelled scholars pointed out
that Tërnava, Bajgora, and their group lack advanced credentials in religious
instruction.
In March 2012, Bajgora also made
news after removing a moderate cleric, imam Musli Verbani, from a mosque in the
northern KOSOVO town of Kaçanik. The expelled imam was supported by some 1,800
local Muslims in Kacanik, who demonstrated for his reinstatement.
In July 2011, along with Peace TV,
the "Center" produced videos supporting the proposed erection of a Wahhabi "mega-mosque" in
Prishtina, the KOSOVO capital.
Muslim extremists assembled in
Prishtina – which has 22 mosques at present, some distinguished by their
beautiful decorations – to demand a "big mosque" as a counterpart to
a Roman Catholic cathedral currently under construction in the center of the
city, and dedicated to Mother Teresa – an ALBANIAN who was born in neighbouring
MACEDONIA.
Catholics, about 10% of the populace
of two million, are the second largest religious community in KOSOVO, which is
constitutionally defined as a secular state; and Catholics, although a
minority, are prominent in KOSOVO culture and politics.
OFFICIAL ISLAMIC COMMUNITY OF MACEDONIA IS UNDER
FUNDAMENTALIST CONTROL.
The campaign for a
"mega-mosque" was viewed by many ALBANIAN Muslims as an extremist
provocation. Observers of the demonstrations for a new and large structure
reported that many participants were ALBANIANS from MACEDONIA, where the
official Islamic Community is under
fundamentalist control.
"Rahma (Mercy)" is a
charity operated out of Bolton and Leicester in the UK and following the
radical Deobandi sect of Islam,
which inspired the Taliban. The charity has also supported a radical preacher,
Kastriot Duka, alias Xhemajl Duka – who, before he was expelled from KOSOVO to
his birthplace, ALBANIA, in 2010, established a mosque and a program for
orphans in the KOSOVO village of Marina, near the city of Skenderaj.
Traditional Muslims in the Skenderaj
vicinity obtained 6,000 signatures for a petition demanding closure of Duka's
compound, in which, they complained, young girls were forced to wear Wahhabi-style face veils and full-body
covering.
In August, however, Artan Haraqija
and Visar Duriqi of the KOSOVO Center for Investigative Reporting revealed that
since his expulsion, Duka has repeatedly reentered KOSOVO and visited his
mosque and orphanage, while money from "Rahma (Mercy)" in BRITAIN is
sent there through bank wire or by courier.
"Rahma (Mercy)," created
in 1999, had the alleged purpose of assisting KOSOVO war refugees. Peace TV and
"Rahma (Mercy)" apparently chose to target KOSOVO as a poor country
ravaged by war a decade ago and in need of substantial aid.
The moderate interpretation of Islam
and the respect for people who believe in other religions – for which KOSOVO
Muslims are known -- may also have persuaded the SOUTH ASIAN agitators that KOSOVO
was in need of an "Islamic revival" of the kind Wahhabis, Deobandis, and other extremists apparently deem necessary
for the moral and spiritual health of the global Islamic community. KOSOVO, for
instance, is the only continental EUROPEAN region, outside the small part of TURKEY
bordering on BULGARIA and GREECE, in which Sufi spirituality is a major element
in Islamic culture. As many as 40% of Muslims in western KOSOVO are Sufis, with
Sufi Tekkes (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khanqah) and mosques open to
anyone.
For Zakir Naik and the luminaries of
Peace TV, as well as the Deobandis of "Rahma (Mercy),'" the
prominence of Sufism in KOSOVO may be another incentive to "cleanse"
local Muslims of their alleged "deviations."
KOSOVO ALBANIANS are devoted to
their own Muslim legacy and can become combative when faced with ideological
aggression from abroad. In addition to ARABS, IRANIANS and TURKISH
fundamentalists have also attempted visible inroads in the KOSOVO Muslim
community. The possibility of fundamentalist subversion of KOSOVO Muslims
merits close scrutiny, and committed assistance to moderate believers.
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