Abdelrahim Ali's Report Reveals Alarming Connections of Muslim Brotherhood in Paraguay

Paraguay has declared the Muslim Brotherhood a
"terrorist organization" that threatens international security and
stability, and constitutes a serious violation of the purposes and principles
of the United Nations. The Permanent Committee of the Paraguayan Congress
approved the decision, which was a draft resolution proposed by Lilián
Samaniego, the head of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the 45-member Congress.
The decision comes after political analyst Abdelrahim Ali,
the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies
in Paris (CEMO), published a report titled "The Islamist Octopus: From
Central Organization to Secret Networks." The report indicated the
Brotherhood's organization and activity in several countries, including
Paraguay.
Abdelrahim Ali warned that after the fall of the Muslim
Brotherhood regime in Egypt and the removal of former President Mohamed Morsi,
members of the international organization met in Istanbul on July 14, 2013, and
approved the group's new policy, which transformed the Brotherhood into a
network without a hierarchy, especially in Europe and America. Since that date,
the hierarchical organization has gradually ceded control in favor of
establishing a spider network for the group.
Europe has become the incubator and safe haven for the group
since the new arrangements were made for the Brotherhood. The apparent
fragmentation of the various Islamist groups conceals the leading role of the
international organization of the Muslim Brotherhood, which carries a future
plan aimed at penetrating Europe.
Abdelrahim Ali has pointed out some of the most important
breakthroughs made and still being made by the Brotherhood in the European
community. The financial network of the Muslim Brotherhood includes holding and
subsidiary companies, ghost banks, and other financial institutions that are
spread across "Panama, Liberia, British Virgin Islands, the Cayman
Islands, and Northern Ireland."
The decision by Paraguay comes amid ongoing discussions in
several countries, including Germany, on how to deal with the Brotherhood and
its activities, as it has been accused of financing terrorism, extremism, and
inciting violence. The group has been declared a terrorist organization by
several countries, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Russia.