PARIS,
June 25, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – French Interior Minister Nicolas
Sarkozy, the French Muslims' favorite politician who helped form their
umbrella group, is set to embark on a diplomacy mission to rescue the
French Council for the Muslim Faith (CFCM).
The
charismatic 50-year-old intends to pay later Saturday, June 25, a yet
undeclared visit to the headquarters of the Union of French Islamic
Organizations (UOIF) to dissuade the group from walking out of the
CFCM, well-informed political sources told IslamOnline.net.
The
UOIF has threatened to quit the umbrella group, the official
representative body of French Muslims, protesting irregularities in
the CFCM's recent elections.
The
union won ten seats out of the 45 up for grabs while the National
Federation of French Muslims (FNMF), which the media described as
“Rabat Friends,” swept the vote with 19 seats.
The
UOIF accused other groups, in collaboration with the Interior
Ministry, of rigging the elections in favor of the FNMF.
On
the vote counting day, the union and the FNMF traded forgery
accusations with both sides seeking independents be added to their
slates.
UOIF
chairman Lhaj Thami Breze maintains that his group has won 15 seats
and is, thus, the main winner of the elections.
With
45 members elected in a direct vote, the Interior Ministry appoints 20
others to the 65-member board of the CFCM.
Sarkozy
was one of the staunch supporters for establishing the CFCM and
supervised its first election in April 2003.
Rescue
Mission
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Sarkozy
will seek support for the reelection of Boubakeur as CFCM chief.
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Fearing
its possible breakup, Sarkozy will try to convince the UOIF to remain
in the umbrella group, French political sources told IOL.
He
will also seek their support for the reelection of Paris Mosque Rector
and outgoing CFCM president Dalil Boubakeur, they added.
The
Grand Mosque of Paris slate secured 10 seats in the vote.
During
the election campaign, Boubakeur was indirectly backed by the media,
which described him as the representative of the liberal Muslim voice
in France.
Sarkozy
and his ministry fear the UOIF could field a rival contender to
challenge Boubakeur, a favorite of the French government.
IOL
has learnt that in the case of pushing for a new CFCM chief, the UOIF
would nominate Ammar Al-Asfar, a Lille mosque imam and one of the
leading French Muslim figures.
The
French government sponsored the launch of the CFCM in 2003 to create
national and regional leaderships able to deal with state officials
about problems Islam faces in the western European country.
According
to its statute, the CFCM deals with the religious aspects of Muslim
life in France, such as the construction of mosques, training of imams
and nomination of chaplains for hospitals, prisons and the military.
France
is home to some six to seven million Muslims, the largest Muslim minority in
Europe.