German authorities ban Islamic extremist group

AP  |  Berlin 

Authorities in northern have banned an organiSation that they say was a "hot spot" for Islamic extremists and searched a mosque that the group runs.

The state interior ministry in Lower Saxony on Tuesday announced a ban on the "German-speaking Islam Group Hildesheim," known by its German acronym DIK.



The group, based in the city of Hildesheim, was long known as a center for ultraconservative Muslims known as Salafists, and the mosque had been raided last year. Apartments also were searched today.

agency dpa quoted Interior Minister Boris Pistorius as saying: "With the ban on the group, a hot spot of the radical Salafist scene in has been dismantled."

Authorities suspect that Muslims were radicalized in the organization and motivated to take part in jihad.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

German authorities ban Islamic extremist group

Authorities in northern Germany have banned an organiSation that they say was a "hot spot" for Islamic extremists and searched a mosque that the group runs. The state interior ministry in Lower Saxony on Tuesday announced a ban on the "German-speaking Islam Group Hildesheim," known by its German acronym DIK. The group, based in the city of Hildesheim, was long known as a center for ultraconservative Muslims known as Salafists, and the mosque had been raided last year. Apartments also were searched today. News agency dpa quoted Interior Minister Boris Pistorius as saying: "With the ban on the group, a hot spot of the radical Salafist scene in Germany has been dismantled." Authorities suspect that Muslims were radicalized in the organization and motivated to take part in jihad. Authorities in northern have banned an organiSation that they say was a "hot spot" for Islamic extremists and searched a mosque that the group runs.

The state interior ministry in Lower Saxony on Tuesday announced a ban on the "German-speaking Islam Group Hildesheim," known by its German acronym DIK.

The group, based in the city of Hildesheim, was long known as a center for ultraconservative Muslims known as Salafists, and the mosque had been raided last year. Apartments also were searched today.

agency dpa quoted Interior Minister Boris Pistorius as saying: "With the ban on the group, a hot spot of the radical Salafist scene in has been dismantled."

Authorities suspect that Muslims were radicalized in the organization and motivated to take part in jihad.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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