Author: Copenhagen Post
Publication: Jyllands-Posten
Date: August 27, 2007
URL: http://jp.dk/uknews/article1061170.ece
Sunday's national meeting for the radical
Hizb ut-Tahrir included incitement to destroy Israel and a re-establishment
of the Caliphate Islamic empire
Controversial Islamic organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir
celebrated its annual congress in Copenhagen on Sunday with words of anger
against Jews and the West, reported daily free newspaper Nyhedsavisen.
Nearly 600 Muslims attended the meeting at
KB Hallen in the city's enclave of Frederiksberg, where religious leaders
spoke of the rise of an new Islamic Caliphate and the fall of Western powers.
'The Caliphate can arrive in an hour, two
months or two years from now,' said Fadi Abdullatif, Hizb ut-Tahrir's president,
who owns a previous conviction for publicly urging his members to kill Jews.
'We are working for a Caliphate from Morocco to Indonesia and from Khazakhstan
to Saudi Arabia.'
The union of nations under a common Islamic
law could be created by force if necessary, according to another of Hizb ut
Tahrir's leaders, Atta bin Khalil. Khalil also told those in attendance to
'continue their state of war against the Jewish nation'.
A third speaker at the congress, Emir Shamil,
said that 'heads may roll' in the recreation of the Caliphate.
Many politicians have unsuccessfully attempted
to dissolve the organisation in the past, but Sunday's congress may have been
the straw that breaks its back. Nearly all political parties are in agreement
that some type of action must be taken against the organisation.
'The sooner the organisation is broken up
the better,' said Tom Behnke, the Conservative judicial spokesperson.
The Social Liberals cultural spokesperson,
Simon Emil Ammitzbøll, is now requesting the Justice Ministry to conduct
surveillance on Hizb ut-Tahrir, saying the congress proved that it is not
merely individual members inciting racial and religious violence but the organisation
as a whole.
Hizb ut-Tahrir has more than one million members
worldwide and an estimated 200 full-time members within Denmark.