Saturday, 9 April 2011

ACT! for America


CAIR sought money from Qaddafi


Dear Harold,

At a recent House Appropriations subcommittee hearing, U.S. Rep. Frank Wolf cited a letter CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations) Executive Director Nihad Awad wrote to Muammar Qaddafi, in which Awad asked for money for CAIR. See the Fox News story below.

CAIR has a history of seeking, and receiving, money from foreign entities, but is not registered under the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA). One of the planks of our
Citizens Appeal to Congress calls for full enforcement of FARA.


Rep. Wolf, Rep. Peter King, Sen. Jon Kyl, Rep. Sue Myrick, Rep. Lamar Smith, and Rep. Trent Franks are among the members of Congress who have briefed attendees at our past legislative briefings in Washington.




You don’t want to miss what these and other congressional leaders will tell us at this year’s National Conference & Legislative Briefing. Topics that will likely be addressed include:

  • Terrorism and border security.

  • Homegrown jihad.

  • Sharia law and the courts.

  • The Muslim Brotherhood.




Lawmaker Criticizes Muslim Group Director's 2009 Fundraising Letter to Qaddafi

By Ben Evansky

Published April 06, 2011

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/04/06/lawmaker-criticizes-controversial-muslim-group-200-fundraising-letter-qaddafi/

| FoxNews.com



Reuters

Council on American-Islamic Relations executive director Nihad Awad wrote a letter to Muammar al-Qaddafi in 2009 asking him for funding for a new project


A letter from the executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR, and president of an offshoot group, Muslim Peace Foundation to Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi has added fuel to criticisms of the controversial group and what its critics say are some dubious fundraising tactics.

In the letter, obtained by Fox News and dated Sept. 23, 2009, CAIR executive director Nihad Awad asks
Qaddafi for funding for his new project called the Muslim Peace Foundation. Qaddafi was in New York attending the United Nations General Assembly.

Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., cited the letter Wednesday at a House Appropriations sub-committee hearing, during which Wolf asked
FBI Director Robert Mueller about the FBI's relationship with CAIR. Mueller replied there "is no formal relationship with CAIR."

A translation of the letter, written originally in Arabic, says in part, "I am pleased to send to Your Excellency in my name most solemn assurances of thanks and appreciation for the efforts you exert in the service of Islam, Muslims and all mankind through your initiative to teach Islam, spread the culture of Islam, and solve disputes, for which you are known internationally."

This was long before the uprising in
Libya this year, with international calls for Qaddafi to step down after a brutal crackdown on dissent that has escalated into a civil war with rebel forces.

But Wolf said the CAIR director's 2009 letter still was written with the full knowledge of the regime's brutal treatment of its opponents and its deplorable human rights record, as well as its long history of acts of international terrorism. And the congressman said the letter showed that Awad was in the process of setting up the Muslim Peace Foundation and seeking to raise $15 million.

The letter ends by thanking Qaddafi for his "generous support."

Wolf said it was his understanding that Awad had made repeated attempts to solicit funding from Qadaffi and other foreign sources, and he asked Mueller if the FBI was aware of the outreach to Qadaffi and if the group had received funds from the Libyan regime.

"I'll have to get back to you on that," Mueller said. "I am not familiar myself at this point, but we may."

It was late March that the Investigative Project on Terrorism released a report that quoted a Libyan news website that reported that CAIR officials, including Awad, had met with Qaddafi in September 2009. They had asked him then to "underwrite a program to distribute 1 million copies of the Quran to government officials and the general public in America."

But CAIR spokesman, Ibrahim Hooper, told Fox News that the organization didn't receive any money from the Libyan government.

"A number of community leaders and organizations were invited to a meeting in New York, at which support was sought for an initiative, unrelated to CAIR, to promote peace and mutual understanding," Hooper said. "That single meeting mirrored the actions of the Bush and Obama administrations."

Hooper also noted that "CAIR was one of the first American organizations to call for a no-fly zone to protect Libyan civilians."

Steve Emerson, the executive director of the Investigative Project on Terrorism, called it "hypocritical" for CAIR leaders to "ask for funds from Qaddafi given that they've just condemned him."

"Their transgressions are multiple some of them fall into immorality, some into illegality," Emerson told Fox News. As for CAIR raising funds abroad, Emerson says it's legal to raise money but must be reported on the group's annual 990 tax form. However, Emerson said if they were to work at the "direction or control" of a foreign donor they could very well be violating the Foreign Agent Registration Act.

Hooper would not respond to Fox News' questions on whether CAIR receives funding from foreign donors, but he would say that CAIR works with the FBI on "an almost daily basis on civil rights issues."


Related Links


Fundraising Letter Sent From Controversial Muslim Group's Director to Muammar al-Qaddafi


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