French luxury brand Chanelwas accidently targeted in Germany. EPA-EFE/ANDRES MARTINEZ CASARES

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German ministry mistakenly targets CHANEL in Islamic extremism purge

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In its clampdown on Islamic extremists in Germany, the country’s interior ministry has targeted several Islamic centres, a mosque, and their affiliated online media channels.

Unfortunately, in doing so, it made an embarrassing error.

Due to a typo, the decree mistakenly named the luxury brand CHANEL’s YouTube channel instead of the intended Islamist channel connected to the Islamic Centre in Berlin.

On July 24, Germany closed one of its largest and oldest mosques and banned the nationwide Shia Muslim organisation that operates it, citing concerns over religious extremism.

But, in the ministry’s announcement, a typo has caused some red faces.

The prohibition order included websites connected to the Islamist organisation, but instead of the YouTube link to the Islamic Centre of Berlin, the interior ministry referred to the YouTube link of CHANEL.

The brand’s channel was not affected but the ministry’s mistake was only fixed hours later in an official correction.

 

The clampdown was accompanied by German authorities conducting a major operation involving dozens of police raiding Hamburg’s Blue Mosque and 53 other properties across the country, including mosques in Berlin, Frankfurt and Munich, which were also closed.

According to the interior ministry, the organisations preached “totalitarian rule, aggressive antisemitism and support for the terror group Hezbollah”.

“The [Islamic Centre of Hamburg] propagates an Islamist, totalitarian ideology in Germany,” said interior minister Nancy Faeser.

“This Islamist ideology is directed against human dignity, against women’s rights, against an independent judiciary and against our democratic State.”

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