Merkel's gov't has refused to outlaw the terrorist entity

he nearly 100,000 member Central Council of Jews in Germany urged on Monday that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s administration outlaw the entire terrorist entity Hezbollah.

Just days after Dr. Felix Klein, Merkel’s commissioner to combat antisemitism and support Jewish life in Germany, said it is not safe for Jews to wear kippot in public, the council’s weekly German Jewish paper Jüdische Allgemeinereported that, “The Central Council of Jews in Germany calls for a ban of the Shi’ite militia Hezbollah.”

Hezbollah has murdered Jews in Europe, including a 2012 attack in which its operatives blew up an Israeli tour bus in Bulgaria. Five Israelis and their Bulgarian Muslim bus driver were murdered in the terrorist attack at the seaside resort of Burgas on the Black Sea.

Council head Dr. Josef Schuster said that “a full ban of Hezbollah’s organization has already happened in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom,” adding that “Hezbollah is heavily financed by Iran, and Hezbollah poses, in its entirety, a threat to the entire world.”

Germany and the EU merely outlawed Hezbollah’s so-called military wing in 2013. The Netherlands, UK, US, Canada, Arab League and Israel classify all of Hezbollah as a terrorist entity.

“A continuation of the distinction between their individual wings would be negligent and should therefore be corrected as soon as possible,” Schuster said.

Ibrahim Mousawi, the terrorist group’s own spokesman, has said that: “Hezbollah is a single, large organization. We have no wings that are separate from one another.”

Schuster also criticized the Berlin authorities for allowing the annual al-Quds Day rally to take place on Saturday:

“The Al Quds demonstration conveys nothing but antisemitism and hatred of Israel,” Schuster said. Jüdische Allgemeine wrote that Schuster said that the rally “is as an Islamist propaganda campaign against Israel that seeks the conquest of Jerusalem and the destruction of Israel.” The Iranian mullah regime is praised.

He added that: “It’s incomprehensible to us that this demo is approved year after year.”

Berlin’s mayor Michael Müller said in 2017 that he would crack down against the al-Quds Day march in the heart of Berlin. He has taken no action to stop the antisemitic rally since that announcement. In May, Müller’s Social Democratic Party think tank the Friedrich Ebert Foundation hosted an Iranian regime Holocaust-denial institute in Berlin. The founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini, created al-Quds Day in 1979 as a worldwide demonstration to protest Israel’s existence.

In February, Müller’s social democratic colleagues – German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Niels Annen, an undersecretary at the foreign ministry – celebrated Iran’s Islamic revolution.

Michael Spaney, the executive director of the Mideast Freedom Forum Berlin, said in a statement on Monday that 1,600 radical Islamists are expected to attend the al-Quds rally on Saturday. An opposition protest titled “Against the al-Quds March! No Islamism and Antisemitism in Berlin” is slated to also be held on Saturday. At past marches observed by The Jerusalem Post, a mixture anti-Israel activists – Hezbollah members, pro-Iranian regime supporters, neo-Nazis, pro-boycott Israel activists and supporters of the designated terrorist organization the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – have participated in the march.

A spokesman for Germany’s Interior Ministry (BMI) wrote to the Post in March after the UK banned Hezbollah: “The BMI does not comment on concrete prohibition considerations in general. This applies regardless of whether there is reason to do so in individual cases.”

BMI has provided the same answer to Post queries since 2008 about whether Merkel’s administration plans to outlaw all of Hezbollah, while the EU has banned its military arm since 2013. Read more at JPost