Over 1,000 protesters gathered in Hamburg over the weekend to demand the creation of an Islamic caliphate in Germany. An extremist group known as Muslim Interaktiv organized the demonstration.
According to one speaker at the event, the caliphate is a “system that provides security.” He also claimed it is misunderstood and “demonized” by the media and politicians in Germany.
The group gathered to protest the alleged “Islamophobic” policies of the government and “disinformation” against Muslims in media reporting on the Israel-Hamas war.
TERRORIST TIES.
According to Germany’s Federal Criminal Intelligence Service, Muslim Interaktiv is part of Hizb ut-Tahrir, an international Salafi Islamist terrorist group that advocates for a global caliphate under Sharia law. Germany banned Hizb ut-Tahrir in 2003. The UK also banned it earlier this year.
German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser of the left-wing Social Democratic Party confirmed that security services are monitoring Muslim Interaktiv. “Other groups that raise emotions, radicalize and recruit new Islamists are also being watched by our security authorities. This included the group at the Hamburg demonstration,” Faeser said.
“The red line at which Germany’s protection of the right of assembly and freedom of speech ended had to be clear. No terrorism propaganda for Hamas, no hate speech directed at Jews. If crimes like this occur, there has to be immediate and forceful intervention at demonstrations,” she explained.
Significantly, the pro-Caliphate protest comes on the heels of a study by the Criminological Research Institute of Lower Saxony, which found that nearly half of young Muslims in the German state — 45.8 percent — preferred an Islamic Caliphate to liberal democracy. Almost 70 percent said they believed the principles of the Quran should take precedence over German law, and over a third said they understood violence towards those who insult Allah or Muhammad.
„So gehorche nicht den Lügnern!“
Eindrücke aus der heutigen Demonstration in Hamburg pic.twitter.com/N7pRpcSgYg
— Muslim Interaktiv (@MInteraktiv) April 27, 2024