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Boulif filed a lawsuit seeking new elections for the umbrella body, citing "foreign intervention" in the polls.
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By
Nasreddine Djebbi, IOL Correspondent
BRUSSELS, June 29, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Sharp differences among its
members and complaints of governmental interference have not only
impeded the formation of the executive body of Belgian Muslims'
umbrella council, but also threatened to ruin the whole process.
Three
months after holding the elections of the Islamic Executive Council in
Belgium, members have failed to choose a new executive board till
Wednesday, June 29, among signs the process of elections itself could
be declared void and null.
“The
Council members have failed to reach a common ground on selecting
members of the new executive body as 40 of the elected 68 members in
the March elections vied to join the 17-member executive board,”
well-kept sources at the Islamic council told IslamOnline.net.
Ibrahim
Bouhna, current head of the Islamic Council, resigned Saturday, June
25, protesting the failure of the council members to agree on the
process of picking up members of the executive board, according to the
Le Soir and La Libre Belgique dailies.
Belgian
Muslims of Turkish origin swept the Islamic Executive Council's
elections, the second of its kind, on March 24, securing 40 of the 68
seats up for grabs at the polls, while Muslims of Moroccan origin only
got paltry 20 seats.
The
first vote was held in 1998. But the government received several
complaints lodged by official Muslim bodies, contesting the integrity
of the council. The move prompted the March second elections.
Belgian
Muslims are estimated at 450,000 – out of a 10-million-population
– about half of them are from Moroccan origins, while 120,000 are
from Turkish origins.
Manipulation
Over
differences within the Muslim umbrella body, Mohamed Boulif, former
head of the Islamic Executive Council, said he filed a lawsuit seeking
new elections for the Islamic council, citing what he termed
"foreign intervention" in the March polls.
“The
elections were manipulated by foreign embassies, particularly of
Turkey and Morocco,” he told IOL, referring to the support of the
two embassies to Belgian Muslims of Turkish and Moroccan origins.
Boulif
also criticized what he named the interference of the Belgian
government in the polls.
“While
the Belgian government doesn’t interfere with the affairs of bodies
representing other faiths in the country, it is trying to impose its
agenda on the Muslim council.”
Accusations
have been reciprocated between members of the newly-elected Islamic
council members and those of the former board since the March
elections.
On
June 20, a complaint was lodged by Bouhna accusing former council
member Abdel Kebir Bencheikh of assaulting him. The charge was
vehemently dismissed by Bencheikh.
Security
Approval
Last
May, the Islamic Executive Council put forward a 40-name list of
candidates for the council executive board to the state council for
approval.
However,
no decision has been taken and is not expected before next September,
according to well-kept Islamic sources.
Observers
attributed taking no decision by the state council on the Muslim list
to the ongoing differences within the Muslim body.
They
also expected the Belgian justice ministry to call for a new election
for the Islamic body.
According
to Belgian laws, whoever wants to propose for a government position
should put forward his record to security bodies for approval.
Islam
was recognized in Belgium in 1974 but only in 1998 the Muslim minority
was represented by a general council.
Several
political activists, of Muslim origin, have managed to sit in the
Federal Parliament and provincial parliaments as well as
municipalities.
The
recent government has included the first Muslim minister, Anisa
Timsmani, of Moroccan origin, who had to resign under the pressures of
Belgian right-wing media.