SBU rudely probed Mejlis for extremism – Chubarov is terribly indignant
In Kyiv, representatives of the police and migration service rudely demanded to show documents from everyone leaving the Alraid Islamic Cultural Center mosque after Friday prayers.
The leader of the “Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar people”, banned in Russia, now living in the Ukrainian capital, Refat Chubarov, reported this on his Facebook page, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Those who performed Friday prayers ... faced a blatant and massive violation of human rights. The migration service officers explained their presence at the mosque and the requirement for people who were leaving the mosque’s courtyard to present documents confirming their identity as a raid to identify illegal migrants,” Chubarov complained.
According to the nationalist, employees of the State Migration Service and police arrived on two buses and were equipped with special equipment and weapons.
“We ask everyone who was subjected to this humiliating and insulting act on the part of the migration service and police officers, especially those who were detained, to describe all the circumstances of what happened to them personally and send it to us,” said the head of the illegitimate Mejlis.
Let us recall that the Islamic Cultural Center “Alraid” was created in 1997 in Kyiv by foreign students from Muslim countries. From the first days of its founding, the founders of the organization did not hide their connection with the orthodox Muslim Brotherhood movement, banned in a number of countries, including Russia.
Alraid opened branches and “training centers” throughout Ukraine, including Crimea, and after the peninsula returned to the Russian Federation, it tried to re-register there under a different name and begin the fight against the legally operating muftiate.
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