MWL offers help to buy building to host new Florence Islamic Center

Muhammad bin Abdul Karim Al-Issa, secretary-general of the Muslim World League, said more Islamic places of worship in Florence could be financed by Saudi Arabia. (File/MLW)
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Updated 24 May 2023
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MWL offers help to buy building to host new Florence Islamic Center

  • ‘Italy is a country of tolerance and coexistence,’ Muslim World League chief says at event attended by Arab News
  • Islamic community has to leave building that hosts city mosque due to owner’s wish to terminate contract

ROME: The secretary-general of the Muslim World League has offered economic support to the Islamic community in Florence to buy a building to host a new Center.

“If the Islamic community of Florence officially asks for funds for the new mosque, we will study how to support it financially,” Muhammad bin Abdul Karim Al-Issa said at an event in the Italian city attended by Arab News. He met with Mayor Dario Nardella and local Imam Izzeddin Elzir.

Some 30,000 Muslims live in Florence. The Islamic community has to leave the building where the city mosque is currently hosted due to the property owner’s wish to terminate the contract.

The mosque will be relocated to a former bank only a stone’s throw away from the current location. The new property was found after a long negotiation due to the high cost of real estate in Florence.

It will cost approximately €1.2 million ($1.29 million). More money will be needed to renovate the building.

Al-Issa said more Islamic places of worship in Florence could be financed by Saudi Arabia, as happened with the Great Mosque in Rome.

Italy’s largest Islamic place of worship, the Great Mosque was built thanks to a donation from the late King Faisal.

“We will support the Islamic community in Florence according to its will,” Al-Issa said. “Italy is a country of tolerance and coexistence, it has a great constitution, a great people, it is a country that we feel very close to. Florence is the city of dialogue between cultures and faiths.”


Egypt’s El-Sisi accepts invite to join Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’

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Egypt’s El-Sisi accepts invite to join Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’

  • Kosovo has been a close ally with the US which supported its independence from Serbia in 2008
  • Italy will not take part in Board of Peace initiative, daily Corriere della Sera reports

CAIRO: Egypt’s foreign ministry said Wednesday that President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi has accepted an invitation from US President Donald Trump to join his “Board of Peace.”

Egypt “announces its acceptance of the invitation and its commitment to fulfilling the relevant legal and constitutional procedures,” the statement said, praising Trump for his Middle East policies.

“Egypt expresses its support for the Board of Peace’s mission for the second phase of the comprehensive plan to end the conflict in Gaza,” it added.

Kosovo said on Wednesday it had accepted an invitation ​from US President Donald Trump to join his “Board of Peace.”

“I am deeply honored by the President’s personal invitation to ‌represent the ‌Republic ‌of ⁠Kosovo ​as ‌a founding member of the Board of Peace, standing shoulder to shoulder with the United States in the ⁠pursuit of a safer ‌world,” Kosovo’s President Vjosa ‍Osmani ‍wrote on X.

“America ‍helped bring peace to Kosovo. Today, Kosovo stands firmly as America’s ally, ready to help carry that peace forward,” Osmani ⁠said.

Kosovo, a Balkan country of 1.6 million people, has been a close ally with the United States which supported its independence from Serbia in 2008.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also said Wednesday that he has agreed to join the Board of Peace in a departure from an earlier stance when his office criticized the makeup of the board’s committee tasked with overseeing Gaza.

Italy won’t take part in US President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” initiative, daily Corriere della Sera reported on Wednesday, citing concern that joining such a group led by a single country’s leader would violate Italy’s constitution.

Trump’s plan has so far drawn cautious reactions from Western allies, as diplomats say it could undermine the work of the United Nations.

Norway and Sweden, meanwhile, said they would not be joining the board at this stage, following in the footsteps of France, which has expressed concern the board could seek to replace the United Nations as the mediator in global conflicts.