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Greece: The Increasing Importance Of Muslims Is A New Challenge

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  • Greece: The Increasing Importance Of Muslims Is A New Challenge

    GREECE: THE INCREASING IMPORTANCE OF MUSLIMS IS A NEW CHALLENGE
    Translation by Michela Mogavero

    Equilibri.net
    http://uk.equilibri.net/article/8217/Greece__the_ increasing_importance_of_Muslims_is_a_new_challeng e
    Nov 16 2007
    Italy

    The first Islamic prayer centre has been opened in Athens, ahead
    of the big mosque that will be built around 2009-2010. Even if the
    integration of Greek Muslims in the social-political structure of
    the country is quite good, the possible proliferation of radicalism
    constitutes a real threat.

    Angelita La Spada

    Equilibri.net (16 November 2007)

    Controversial minarets

    Greece is the gateway to Europe, geographically situated at the point
    of contact and possible conflict between the Old Christian Continent
    and the Muslim Middle East. The main Greek Islamic communities
    are located in the North of the country, in the region of Western
    Thracia, at the crossroads with Turkey and Bulgaria. Its members are
    expected to number 110,000 and to constitute 1% of the overall Greek
    population and a fourth of the inhabitants of Western Thracia. This
    region has a great strategic importance for two main reasons: the
    former deals with the attention of the Turkish, which periodically
    create nationalistic and religious clashes between the Muslim and the
    Christian inhabitants; the latter is linked to the huge potential
    for growth, due to vast infrastructural projects like the 280 km
    pipeline which will transport up to 800 barrels of Russian oil per
    day, from the Bulgarian port of Burgas to the oil terminal situated
    near Alexandroupolis, on the Aegean Sea.

    The Muslim community in Thracia is well integrated within the social
    and political structure of the country, yet the possibility that
    this part of the population becomes extremist is a real danger. In
    the nineties, some reports by the Greek intelligence services showed
    their concern about the huge amounts of money given to the Greek Muslim
    minorities by the Saudis, which was generally invested in religious
    assistance activities. Outside Thracia, unlike what happens in other
    European countries, in Greece no signs of Muslim segregation have been
    detected. The presence of heterogeneous ethnic and racial areas in the
    centre of Athens -which avoids the creation of any kind of security
    shield- could favour the development of fundamentalist propaganda.

    After 2000, in the heart of Athens, a new Islamic instable basis has
    been established and dozens mosques have been created in apartments,
    garages and warehouses, and 5 of them have been recognized by
    SCA(Serious Crimes Agency) as places where fundamentalist elements
    interact and pray. A few months ago, the first Greek Arabic centre
    for culture and civilization was officially established in the
    Southern area of Athens. More than 170 years after the fall of the
    Ottoman Empire, thousands of Muslims will be able to carry on with
    their rites in a place which is 1,800 metres wide (previously it was
    a textile factory). The complex, financed by Saudis, can hold up to
    1000 people and be used at the same time as cultural centre and school
    of Arabic language. De facto, the opening of the centre represents a
    temporary solution to a controversial issue which has existed for a
    long time between the Muslim community and the Greek authorities as to
    the building of an out and out mosque in Athens.The opposition of the
    Orthodox church and that of citizens which associate the mosques with
    a four-century long domination of the Ottoman empire and political
    rivalry with Turkey, are postponing the actual construction of an
    official mosque. According to a recent survey carried out by 1500
    Athenians, more than 2,5 million (more than half of them) oppose the
    building of a mosque for the numerous community of Muslim migrants
    (500,000).

    Even before the Olympic Games in 2004, the socialist government had
    decided to authorize the building of an Islamic cultural centre and a
    mosque in the area of Peania, near Athens International Airport. But
    after the reaction of the Greek Church, who supported the creation
    of a mosque but not of a cultural centre, the local authorities froze
    the project. Last year, on a proposal by the Greek Church, opposed to
    the re-opening of an Ottoman mosque in Monastiraki Square (Athens),
    the Greek government has given the go ahead for the building of a
    mosque by 2010, which will be placed in a non- residential area of
    Eleonas or Elaionas, near Omonia, in the centre of Athens.

    Unequal threats

    Differently from what happens in other European countries which are
    subjected to global Islamist and Qaidist threats, Greece has not yet
    considered the threat of Jihadist terrorism. The country, together
    with al-Andalus (Muslim Spain) was indicated by the leadership of
    the Muslim Brothers as being a place -once belonging to the Islamic
    land- which now has to be won back, in order to create a pan-Islamic
    caliphate. Apart from this, no other episodes linked to the jihadist
    network have been registered in the country.

    The only episode of terrorism happened last January, when the
    American Embassy in Athens was hit by an anti-tank rocket Rpg-18,
    built in Russia. The act was claimed by the Revolutionary Fight (EA,
    Epanastatikos Agonas), a terrorist group of natives from the extreme
    Left responsible for another six attacks. This followed a series of
    events between 2005 and 2006, characterized by a number of episodes
    whcih showed the birth or re-birth of terrorist groups. In the past
    there were also various networks which launched attacks against some
    Western targets in the Greek Republic. Throughout the course of the
    centuries, these networks have relied on Arabic organizations with
    American objectives and Armenian or Kurd groups aiming at Turkish
    targets. In the most important cases of terrorist attacks, Kurd PKK
    was involved, as well as affiliates of the Palestinian organization
    15 May, or the Abu Nidal group, more than Black September and Lebanon
    Shiite groups.

    It is considered that cooperation between native and foreign groups
    has been used in training practices, particularly guerrilla tactics,
    the use of explosives, improvised tactics in the use of weapons, the
    planning of attacks, as well as logistic and financial support. At the
    moment, there are no clear signs of terrorist activities politically
    motivated and linked to international networks; it is not excluded,
    though, that Greece could be a transit channel, even for migration
    routes. Thousands people coming from the Middle East and Central Asia
    arrive in Greece before getting to Western Europe.

    Possible threats of Islamic radicalism are due, therefore, to phenomena
    of illegal immigration. Throughout the years, criminal organizations
    of Balkan and Middle Eastern inspiration have developed huge networks
    of contacts and competences in the field of drug trafficking, illegal
    immigration and the falsification of identity documents. Terrorist
    groups linked to criminality are working together. The links between
    crime and terror are confirmed by the fact that the operators of
    terror often cover the routes of the traffic of drugs, weapons or
    other transnational criminal activities.

    In 2005, for example, a Moroccan citizen was arrested on the
    Turkish-Greek border while he was trying to reach Greece on a bus
    linking Istanbul with Thessalonica. Mazra, wanted by the French and
    Moroccan authorities, was charged of belonging to a fundamentalist
    organization, an armed branch of Al-Qaeda in Morocco. He was found in
    possession of some false documents, something which has been frequently
    registered during the last five years and proved by numerous detentions
    of Arabic fundamentalists in European countries who owned Greek
    passports. 'Grecian' Arabs were detained in Great Britain, Portugal,
    France and the Netherlands. Interesting data: 10-15% of detained
    people were suspected of belonging to Islamic extremist organizations.

    Conclusion

    The opening of the first mosque in Athens makes official the Islamic
    presence in Greece, considering the necessity to face, as in other
    European countries, the possible threats of indoctrination activities
    and fundamentalist propaganda. As well as this, there is the risk
    of radicalization that could happen if a Wahhabite mosque became
    the centre for spreading extremist literature, collecting funds and
    distributing videos honouring the Jihad fighters.
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