Far-right extremists threaten with bomb attack on Berlin mosque
The religious officials working at the Şehitlik Mosque -- belongs to the Turkish-Muslim organization DITIB -- told the media outlets that they received an e-mail from the far-right terrorist group Combat 18, which claimed that the group had planted plastic explosives in the mosque complex located in German capital Berlin.
- World
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 03:20 | 25 November 2019
- Modified Date: 03:21 | 25 November 2019
Suspected far-right extremists sent an email including a bomb threat to Berlin's prominent Şehitlik Mosque on Monday.
Mosque officials told Anadolu Agency that they immediately informed the police after receiving an e-mail from the far-right terrorist group Combat 18, which claimed that the group had planted plastic explosives in the mosque complex.
Rıfkı Olgun Yücekök, the Turkish consul general in Berlin, urged German authorities to take stronger measures to protect the mosques.
"This may turn out to be a hoax, but still it's an attempt to disrupt peace, social cohesion," he stressed, adding that they expect German authorities to identify those behind such threats and bring them to justice.
The Şehitlik Mosque, which belongs to the Turkish-Muslim organization DITIB, is a well-known Muslim place of worship in the capital.
In recent months, dozens of mosques across Germany received bomb threats, sparking worries among the country's Muslim population.
The country has witnessed growing Islamophobia in recent years, triggered by the propaganda of far-right parties.
Last year more than 100 mosques and religious institutions were attacked.
Police recorded 813 hate crimes against Muslims last year, including insults, threatening letters, and physical assaults. At least 54 Muslims were injured in the attacks.
Germany, a country of over 81 million people, has the second-largest Muslim population in Western Europe after France. Among the country's nearly 4.7 million Muslims, 3 million are of Turkish origin.