The Bosnian prison imam Džemal Å ibljakoviÄ looks after
Muslim prisoners. One would wish that he would take action against
extremism. But sometimes he seems to locate the extremism more with the
authorities than with the accused.
Džemal Å ibljakoviÄ (born in 1991) is a prison chaplain of the Islamic
Faith Community and thus the first full-time Islamic chaplain in
prison. He looks after more than 550 Muslim prisoners in Vienna and
Korneuburg. This obviously does not stop him from attacking the
investigations currently underway against more than a hundred accused of
terrorism and even placing them in a racist context ā as it seems, also
in front of prisoners. This is suggested by documents obtained by
eXXpress. Enquiries to Å ibljakoviÄ have so far remained unanswered.
Particularly striking: Å ibljakoviÄ is an employee of the TURN
association. A member of the TURN team is also in the focus of the
investigators: He was one of the 30 people whose houses were searched at
the beginning of November as part of āOperation Luxorā on suspicion of
terrorism.
The investigations, whom Å ibljakoviÄ also criticizes, are directed
against suspected Muslim Brotherhood members and Hamas supporters ā for
money laundering, financing terrorism and membership in a terrorist
organization. At the beginning of November, house searches were
therefore carried out in a total of 60 flats and houses.
Å ibljakoviÄ has repeatedly criticized Austriaās actions against
political Islam, to which the Muslim Brotherhood belongs, for example on
his Facebook account, where he warns āof a criminalization of Muslim
citizens.ā A video meeting from March 22, 2021, to which the
āDocumentation and Counseling Center on Islamophobia and Anti-Muslim
Racism invited several people, among them Å ibljakoviÄ, provides at least
an insight into how he exchanges views with prison inmates.
Operation Luxorā and the anti-terror package were the subject of the
meeting. The tenor: Operation Luxor and the anti-terror package are both
Islamophobic and racist measures. Neither the Muslim Brotherhood nor
its Palestinian branch, Hamas, which is classified as a terrorist
organization, were criticized. Å ibljakoviÄ spoke about his work with
prisoners.
In an audio file in possession of eXXpress, Džemal Å ibljakoviÄ
explains, after first talking about youth work: āWhat has basically come
from the inmatesā side, if I can say it in general terms, is simply the
concern that something like this has become possible, that an action
like Operation Luxor has become possible, so to speak.ā
Å ibljakoviÄ mentions this concern in the same breath as the āfear of
these āquick-fireā lawsā that is supposedly spreading among the
prisoners. And then the fear, to what extent will this affect my whole
life afterwards, especially if you are in a prison context where you
feel powerless anyway, where powerlessness is a very, very big part of
your whole life, where almost every part of your life is controlled by
others, such a message comes upon you more strongly perceptible.ā
Afterwards, Å ibljakoviÄ tells the prisoners how one can take action
against such proposed laws, and thus also be successful at the
Constitutional Court. He does not deny the accusation of racism that he
has made. It is a serious question: Is Džemal Å ibljakoviÄ using his
contact with prison inmates to oppose Operation Luxor, which he opposes,
and the governmentās anti-terror measures?
Å ibljakoviÄ comes from Bosnia, studied religious education and has a
masterās degree in social work. People from his environment who knew
Å ibljakoviÄ only a few years ago tell eXXpress that he has a pronounced
Salafist attitude. Publicly available information proves that
Å ibljakoviÄ at least has dealings with Salafists. Å ibljakoviÄās current
position on Salafism and on some particularly well-known representatives
of Salafism is not known to eXXpress, as enquiries have so far remained
unanswered.
At least seven people took part in the Zoom meeting, including
Bernhard GlƤser from the probation service āNEUSTARTā. The association
initiated the āKompassā project together with the Ministry of the
Interior to help those who want to voluntarily leave an extremist scene
and ideology. GlƤser has a leading function in this. GlƤserās attitude
to the authoritiesā investigations would also be of interest. After all,
he runs āKompassā together with the Ministry of the Interior.
The sharp criticism of āOperation Luxorā as allegedly racist is
ultimately directed primarily against the public prosecutorās office in
Graz, which had also ordered the house searches, and against the
Ministry of the Interior.
The government was not involved ā as is
usually the case with house searches.