Austria says to expel ‘several’ imams, shut 7 mosques

Austria says to expel ‘several’ imams, shut 7 mosques
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A Muslim woman walks by a mosque at Islam Centre of Vienna on April 14, 2017 in Vienna, Austria. (AFP)
Austria says to expel ‘several’ imams, shut 7 mosques
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A community member tries to open the door of the Nizam-i Alem mosque in Vienna’s 10th district, on June 8, 2018 after it was closed as part of seven mosques that the Austrian government announced they would shut down. (AFP)
Updated 08 June 2018
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Austria says to expel ‘several’ imams, shut 7 mosques

Austria says to expel ‘several’ imams, shut 7 mosques
  • Austria will expel “several” foreign-funded imams and shut seven mosques in a crackdown on “political Islam,”
  • The moves came after an investigation by the religious affairs authority into images which emerged in April of children in Turkish-backed mosques playing dead

VIENNA: Austria will expel “several” foreign-funded imams and shut seven mosques in a crackdown on “political Islam,” Chancellor Sebastian Kurz announced on Friday.
Kurz said the moves came after an investigation by the religious affairs authority into images which emerged in April of children in Turkish-backed mosques playing dead and reenacting the World War I battle of Gallipoli.
“Parallel societies, political Islam and radicalization have no place in our country,” Kurz said.
The photos, published by the Falter weekly, showed the young boys in camouflage uniforms marching, saluting, waving Turkish flags and then playing dead.
Their “corpses” were then lined up and draped in the flags.
The mosque in question was run by the Turkish-Islamic Cultural Associations (ATIB) organization, based in the German city of Cologne, and a branch of Turkey’s religious affairs agency Diyanet.
ATIB itself condemned the photos at the time, calling the “highly regrettable” event and said that “called off before it had even ended.”