Germany Bans Islamist Group Muslim Interaktiv Amid Social Media Recruitment Concerns

November 5, 2025
Germany Bans Islamist Group Muslim Interaktiv Amid Social Media Recruitment Concerns
  • Experts describe the group’s recruitment as “TikTok terrorism,” noting platforms could do more to curb such activity.

  • Readers are directed to the WELT Spezial segment for the full details.

  • The reporting includes statements from authorities and experts, with context on social media dynamics and government responses to extremism.

  • The Bundesinnenministerium has banned the Islamist association Muslim Interaktiv, ordering its dissolution and seizure of assets, while investigations continue into two related groups, Generation Islam and Realität Islam.

  • Police conducted raids at seven locations in Hamburg early on the day of the ban to disrupt the group’s activities.

  • Muslim Interaktiv traces back to Hizb ut-Tahrir, which advocates a global caliphate; Hizb ut-Tahrir has been banned in Germany since 2003, though adherents operate under new names.

  • Muslim Interaktiv maintained a strong social media presence and produced professional-looking videos portraying its leaders as modern proponents of a worldwide caliphate, while challenging Germany’s Basic Law.

  • The group appealed particularly to youths through pop-culture styling and extensive use of TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, though its leadership and organizational structure remained opaque.

  • Muslim Interaktiv organized demonstrations over the Israel-Palestine conflict, drawing crowds of more than 1,000 participants in the past year.

  • The groups are not classified as jihadist or terrorist organizations; they pursue political goals through non-violent means, though their messaging aims to undermine democratic norms.

  • Leadership is concealed; Raheem Boateng appears as the public face, with major activity centered in NRW and the Rhine-MMain region.

  • The group is accused of promoting antisocial views, opposing gender equality and LGBTQ rights, and using online and real-world efforts to indoctrinate broad audiences and undermine constitutional order.

Summary based on 18 sources


Get a daily email with more World News stories

More Stories