From the DW:
“German 'Shariah Police' retrial
starts in Wuppertal”
Seven men accused of forming a
"Shariah Police" brigade in western Germany have gone on trial. The
group allegedly patrolled the streets of Wuppertal in orange vests, telling
people to abstain from music and alcohol. The retrial of seven alleged members
of a self-proclaimed "Sharia Police" vigilante group began in the
western city of Wuppertal on Monday. The men were cleared of wrongdoing in
2016, but the case is now being heard again following a higher court's decision
last year to overturn the acquittal. The defendants allegedly patrolled the
streets of Wuppertal in 2014 dressed in orange vests that were emblazoned with
the words "Shariah Police." They're also accused of handing out
flyers to Muslims proclaiming a "Shariah Controlled Zone" and warning
them to abstain from drugs, alcohol, gambling, visiting brothels, listening to
music, and pornography. The men have been charged with violating a ban on the
wearing of uniforms or with being an accessory and could face up to two years
in prison if found guilty. Court documents describe them as members of the
"Salafist scene" and allege that one of their main aims was to
replace Germany's democratic legal system with Shariah law. During the first
trial in 2016, judges at the Wuppertal District Court ruled there was no reason
to punish the men over the uniforms as there was no proof to suggest they had
intended to break the law. In January 2018, the Federal Court of Justice in
Karlsruhe criticized the lower court's finding and ordered a retrial. Mathias
Rohe, a lawyer and scholar of Islam, said the court was right in ordering a
retrial because of the potential for both Muslims and non-Muslims to feel
intimidated by the group. Given the case concerns Islamic law, "of course
the country's Muslim population would be the first to be affected," Rohe
said. Rohe told DW that the self-made vests led some to believe the group had
been playing a harmless joke. "But it is also true that it could have an
intimidating effect on parts of the population at a time when violent Islamist
extremism is also manifesting itself in Germany," Rohe said.
Released ringleader to testify
Wuppertal's Shariah patrol
sparked controversy in Germany in September 2014 when news about the group
first broke. At the time, alleged ringleader Sven Lau expressed regret,
conceding in a video message that "perhaps the name was provocative.
Perhaps it was also a mistake on our part." Sven Lau was convicted in 2017
for aiding an Islamist militia in Syria. Proceedings against Lau have been
suspended and he is expected to appear as a witness in the Wuppertal case on
Friday. He was released from prison last week after serving two-thirds of a 5
1/2 year sentence for supporting terrorist acts.
^ I wrote about this case years
ago when it first came out and when the non-guilty verdict was announced. This
2nd trial is long over-due and hopefully will bring the correct
verdict of guilty. I have been Wuppertal once before (back in December 2014.) I
never saw any “Shariah Police” when I was there for the few hours, but if I had
seen them I would not feel safe as I know most people would not feel safe. I
would feel that way whether I saw these groups of “Shariah Police” patrolling
the streets in a Germany, Canada, the United States or in any country around
the world. These people pretending to be “Islamic Religious Police” are not out
to help and protect people as the real police are. They are only out to spread
hate and fear (between Muslims and Muslims and between Muslims and non-Muslims)
and need to be stopped. I honestly hope that Wuppertal and the officials there
that allowed the non-guilty verdict in the 1st case have learned
their lesson - that what they did was
not just stupid, but extremely dangerous – and that every city in every country
around the world that has these kind of fake “religious police” regardless of
their religion needs to be shown that they will not be allowed to threaten or
hurt anyone. ^
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