The Netherlands has officially BANNED the Muslim Brotherhood
For decades, the Muslim Brotherhood has quietly built a network of institutions, leadership structures, and affiliated organizations across Europe.
While numerous countries outside the EU have designated the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization, the network it has constructed in Europe is only growing stronger.
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The Muslim Brotherhood is one of the oldest and most influential Sunni Islamist movements in the world. Founded in Egypt in 1928, its central objective is the establishment of a society governed by Islamic law, Sharia.
The movement promotes a gradual process of Islamization by using a nation’s existing social and political structures to fundamentally change society.
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Moderate Muslim countries have long recognized the danger the Brotherhood poses.
That’s why Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Jordan have designated it as a terrorist organization, accusing it of promoting extremism and undermining state stability.
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The struggle between Egyptian governments and the Brotherhood has been one of the defining political conflicts in the region.
This tension reached its peak when Mohamed Morsi, a Brotherhood-affiliated figure, became Egypt’s president in 2012 before being removed from power in 2013 following mass protests and military intervention.
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While Qatar has publicly denied direct support for the Brotherhood, it has maintained close ties with Islamist networks linked to it, provided political refuge to senior Hamas figures, and spread the movement’s ideology through its state-funded media network, Al Jazeera.
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In Europe, the Muslim Brotherhood operates through an extensive network of organizations using what can be described as “soft” methods,
Publicly, it presents itself as a moderate movement focused on representing Europe’s minority Muslim population. In reality, it is working within the bounds of the same liberal democracies it wants to destroy.
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The Brotherhood’s European network functions as a decentralized system.
Each country typically has its own local leadership and organizations, while broader coordination occurs between affiliated groups across the continent.
Several institutions act as strategic hubs linking these networks together.
Among the most important of these is the Council of European Muslims (CEM), which coordinates activity across the continent.
Religious guidance is provided through the European Council for Fatwa and Research (ECFR), while the European Institute of Human Sciences (IESH) focuses on training imams, and financial matters are handled by The Europe Trust.
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Funding for the network comes from a range of sources.
Historically, the movement relied heavily on donations from Gulf countries.
Today, support is more closely associated with Qatar and Turkey, alongside real-estate holdings and local donations that provide a stable financial base.
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The Brotherhood has also invested heavily in youth and student engagement.
Through organizations such as the Forum of European Muslim Youth and Student Organizations (FEMYSO), the movement has built influence among Muslim youth and university campuses, helping cultivate what analysts describe as a new “European Muslim elite.”
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Today, the Brotherhood’s European network consists of numerous organizations connected through shared ideology, and leadership ties.
Because the movement operates through a diffuse and loosely connected structure, these links are often indirect, but the network itself remains extensive and influential across the continent.
It’s time for the rest of Europe to follow in the Netherlands’ footsteps and ban the Muslim Brotherhood… before it’s too late.
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