LONDON (Middle East Eyes) - A coalition of Muslim groups in the Netherlands has filed a complaint with the United Nations against a Dutch parliamentary committee tasked with investigating the influence of foreign funding on mosques and Islamic associations.
The Ummah Project, a group based in the Netherlands that is spearheading the effort, filed an 82-page complaint with the UN Human Rights Committee, accusing the Dutch parliamentary committee on unwanted foreign influence (Pocob) of waging a “witch-hunt” against the Muslim community.
The Muslim leaders who are part of the complaint include Hamid Tahiri, Jacob Van Der Blom, and Nasr El Dalmanhoury, who held leadership positions in various mosques and Muslim associations across the country.
The men were called before Pocob in 2020 after the Dutch parliament began investigating the influence of money from a list of “unfree countries” - including Kuwait; Morocco; Qatar; Saudi Arabia; Turkey; and the United Arab Emirates.
Pocob focused only on Muslim organizations in Holland and refused to broaden its scope to include the possibility of influence from other foreign countries.
The three men, summoned by the committee as witnesses, risked possible imprisonment if they failed to testify.
Clips from the committee hearing showed Muslim witnesses enduring an intense line of questioning from parliamentarians.
At one point, a witness who challenged the inquiry’s line of questioning had their microphone switched off.
Samira Sabir, a Dutch barrister who filed the case on behalf of the Ummah Project, said the three men had been forced to defend themselves as suspects against highly incriminating allegations despite committing no crime.
Sabir added that the witness testimonies were carried on a live stream that was picked up by several TV channels. Since then, the men and their places of worship have faced negative backlash, the Ummah Project said.
“Not only does the question arise as to why such a heavy-handed instrument was used to investigate foreign influence, but the disproportionate instrument used, in which the witnesses were publicly interrogated as suspects and under oath, was completely unnecessary,” Sabir told Middle East Eye.
“They were not heard as witnesses but as suspects and had to defend themselves unprepared without being given a chance to be truly heard.
“This summons had the character of a criminal investigation rather than a democratic parliamentary inquiry.”
In 2021, local media revealed that at least ten towns and cities in the Netherlands used private companies to secretly investigate mosques and Islamic institutions.
No comments:
Post a Comment