كشفت التحقيقات، التي تجريها السلطات الأردنية المختصة، وجود نشاط مالي غير قانوني ضلعت به جماعة الإخوان المحظورة طوال الأعوام الماضية داخلياً وخارجياً، تزايدت وتيرته في آخر 8 سنوات.
وأدارت الجماعة شبكة مالية ضخمة ومعقدة كانت تتأتى مواردها من مصادر عدة أبرزها؛ جمع التبرعات التي كانت تقوم بها جمعيات تنشط في هذا المجال بشكل غير قانوني، ومن عوائد استثمارات أقيمت بشكل مباشر وبالباطن داخل الأردن وخارجه، إضافة إلى الاشتراكات الشهرية من الداخل والخارج.
وأثبتت التحقيقات والمضبوطات التي اطلعت عليها وكالة الأنباء الأردنية «بترا»، أن الجماعة التي يُفترض أنها منحلة وعملها غير قانوني، وهو ما أكده قرار محكمة التمييز الصادر عام 2020، حازت وتحت عناوين مختلفة على عشرات الملايين من الدنانير استُثمر جزء منها في شراء شقق خارج الأردن، مؤكدة أنها استُخدمت الأموال لأغراض غير مشروعة قانوناً، ومنها ما سُجل بأسماء أفراد ينتمون للجماعة عن طريق ملكيات مباشرة أو أسهم في بعض الشركات.
وأظهرت التحقيقات جمع ما يزيد على 30 مليون دينار في السنوات الأخيرة، إذ كانت الجماعة المحظورة ترسل المبالغ التي تقوم بجمعها إلى دول عربية وإقليمية ودول خارج الإقليم، فيما استخدم جزء من تلك الأموال لحملات سياسية داخلية عام 2024، فضلاً عن تمويل الجماعة لأنشطة وخلايا تم ضبطها وأحيلت للقضاء.
وضبطت الأجهزة المختصة نحو 4 ملايين دينار في يوم إعلان الحكومة المخطط الذي كان يستهدف الأمن الوطني منتصف أبريل الماضي، بعد أن حاول أشخاص إخفاءها داخل منازل ومستودع شمالي العاصمة عمان بطلب من سائق يعمل لدى قيادي بالجماعة المحظورة.
وأوقفت السلطات المختصة على إثر التحقيقات والبينات والأدلة 11 شخصاً، واستدعت آخرين ممن لهم صلة بملف القضية ورُبط عدم توقيفهم بكفالة مالية.
واستغلت الجماعة المحظورة الأحداث في غزة لجمع التبرعات بطرق مخالفة للقانون وسط غياب لآلية معلنة وشفافة لعملية جمع الأموال التي لم يعرف ولم يعلن عن مصيرها، ومن دون الإفصاح عن مصادر تلك الأموال وحجمها وكيفية إيصالها للأهالي في القطاع، ومن دون الإعلان عن أي تنسيق مع أي منظمة دولية أو إغاثية لنقل تلك الأموال إلى أهالي غزة.
وحسب التحقيقات، اعتمدت الجماعة على وسيلتين في جمع التبرعات؛ إحداها سرية وتتمثل بجمع التبرعات عن طريق بعض الجمعيات وشُعب الإخوان المحظورة (وعددها 44 شعبة)، التي كانت تنشط بصورة غير مشروعة مستغلةً مقرات تابعة لحزب سياسي، والوسيلة الثانية علنية إذ كانت تُرسل للهيئة الأردنية الخيرية الهاشمية ما تجمعه من مواد عينية عبر أذرعها وبعض الجمعيات التي تدار من قبل أشخاص منتمين لها. وبلغ مجموع الأموال التي أرسلت إلى الهيئة من خلال هذه القنوات نحو 413 ألف دينار فقط (أي نحو1% فقط من مجموع التبرعات التي كشفتها التحقيقات التي لا تزال مستمرة).
وبينت التحقيقات أن الأموال كانت تحوّل من الدينار إلى الدولار قبل إيداعها بمحل صيرفة بالعاصمة والذي اتخذت بحقه الإجراءات القانونية، إذ كان يحول الأموال بطرق غير قانونية إلى محل صيرفة بالخارج، وفي بعض الأحيان كانت الأموال تنقل عن طريق رزمها من محل الصيرفة بعمان وشحنها جواً إلى الخارج، وأحياناً كان يتم تهريب الأموال إلى الخارج عن طريق أحد أفراد الجماعة المحظورة الذي كان يتردد إلى إحدى الدول.
وكشفت التحقيقات مصادر التمويل الثابتة لدى الجماعة التي كانت ترد من الاشتراكات الشهرية للأعضاء (في الداخل والخارج) ومن الاستثمار بالشقق بدولة إقليمية وفق الاعترافات. ويصل مجموع الأموال المتأتية من هذه المصادر سنوياً نحو 1.9 مليون دينار، وفق التقديرات الأولية الناجمة عن التحقيقات.
التحقيقات تكشف جمعها أكثر من 30 مليون دينار بشكل غير قانوني
الأردن: «الإخوان» تدير شبكة مالية ضخمة ومعقّدة
15 يوليو 2025 - 14:59
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آخر تحديث 15 يوليو 2025 - 14:59
استغلت الجماعة المحظورة الأحداث في غزة لجمع التبرعات بطرق مخالفة للقانون وسط غياب لآلية معلنة وشفافة
تابع قناة عكاظ على الواتساب
«عكاظ» (عمان) OKAZ_ONLINE@
The investigations conducted by the relevant Jordanian authorities revealed the existence of illegal financial activities involving the banned Muslim Brotherhood group over the past years, both domestically and internationally, with an increased pace in the last eight years.
The group managed a vast and complex financial network that derived its resources from several sources, most notably; fundraising conducted by associations that operate in this field illegally, as well as returns from investments made directly and indirectly inside and outside Jordan, in addition to monthly subscriptions from within and outside the country.
The investigations and the confiscated materials reviewed by the Jordan News Agency "Petra" confirmed that the group, which is supposed to be dissolved and whose activities are illegal, as affirmed by the Court of Cassation's decision issued in 2020, acquired tens of millions of dinars under various titles, part of which was invested in purchasing apartments outside Jordan. It was confirmed that the funds were used for illegal purposes, including some registered in the names of individuals belonging to the group through direct ownership or shares in some companies.
The investigations revealed that more than 30 million dinars were collected in recent years, as the banned group sent the amounts they collected to Arab and regional countries and countries outside the region, while part of that money was used for internal political campaigns in 2024, in addition to financing the group for activities and cells that were seized and referred to the judiciary.
The relevant authorities seized about 4 million dinars on the day the government announced the plan targeting national security in mid-April last year, after individuals attempted to hide it inside homes and a warehouse north of the capital, Amman, at the request of a driver working for a leader of the banned group.
As a result of the investigations, the relevant authorities arrested 11 individuals and summoned others related to the case, linking their non-arrest to a financial bail.
The banned group exploited the events in Gaza to collect donations through illegal means amid a lack of a declared and transparent mechanism for the fundraising process, the fate of which was unknown and not announced, without disclosing the sources of that money, its size, or how it was delivered to the families in the sector, and without announcing any coordination with any international or relief organization to transfer that money to the people of Gaza.
According to the investigations, the group relied on two methods for collecting donations; one was secret, involving fundraising through some associations and branches of the banned Brotherhood (numbering 44 branches), which operated illegally exploiting premises belonging to a political party. The second method was public, as they sent what they collected in kind to the Hashemite Jordanian Charity Organization through their arms and some associations managed by individuals affiliated with them. The total amount of money sent to the organization through these channels was about 413 thousand dinars only (about 1% of the total donations revealed by the ongoing investigations).
The investigations indicated that the money was converted from dinars to dollars before being deposited in a currency exchange in the capital, which has been subjected to legal action, as it illegally transferred money to a currency exchange abroad. At times, the money was transported by bundling it from the exchange in Amman and shipping it by air abroad, and sometimes the money was smuggled abroad by a member of the banned group who frequently traveled to one of the countries.
The investigations revealed the group's fixed sources of funding, which came from monthly subscriptions of members (inside and outside) and from investments in apartments in a regional country, according to confessions. The total amount of money generated from these sources annually is about 1.9 million dinars, according to initial estimates resulting from the investigations.
The group managed a vast and complex financial network that derived its resources from several sources, most notably; fundraising conducted by associations that operate in this field illegally, as well as returns from investments made directly and indirectly inside and outside Jordan, in addition to monthly subscriptions from within and outside the country.
The investigations and the confiscated materials reviewed by the Jordan News Agency "Petra" confirmed that the group, which is supposed to be dissolved and whose activities are illegal, as affirmed by the Court of Cassation's decision issued in 2020, acquired tens of millions of dinars under various titles, part of which was invested in purchasing apartments outside Jordan. It was confirmed that the funds were used for illegal purposes, including some registered in the names of individuals belonging to the group through direct ownership or shares in some companies.
The investigations revealed that more than 30 million dinars were collected in recent years, as the banned group sent the amounts they collected to Arab and regional countries and countries outside the region, while part of that money was used for internal political campaigns in 2024, in addition to financing the group for activities and cells that were seized and referred to the judiciary.
The relevant authorities seized about 4 million dinars on the day the government announced the plan targeting national security in mid-April last year, after individuals attempted to hide it inside homes and a warehouse north of the capital, Amman, at the request of a driver working for a leader of the banned group.
As a result of the investigations, the relevant authorities arrested 11 individuals and summoned others related to the case, linking their non-arrest to a financial bail.
The banned group exploited the events in Gaza to collect donations through illegal means amid a lack of a declared and transparent mechanism for the fundraising process, the fate of which was unknown and not announced, without disclosing the sources of that money, its size, or how it was delivered to the families in the sector, and without announcing any coordination with any international or relief organization to transfer that money to the people of Gaza.
According to the investigations, the group relied on two methods for collecting donations; one was secret, involving fundraising through some associations and branches of the banned Brotherhood (numbering 44 branches), which operated illegally exploiting premises belonging to a political party. The second method was public, as they sent what they collected in kind to the Hashemite Jordanian Charity Organization through their arms and some associations managed by individuals affiliated with them. The total amount of money sent to the organization through these channels was about 413 thousand dinars only (about 1% of the total donations revealed by the ongoing investigations).
The investigations indicated that the money was converted from dinars to dollars before being deposited in a currency exchange in the capital, which has been subjected to legal action, as it illegally transferred money to a currency exchange abroad. At times, the money was transported by bundling it from the exchange in Amman and shipping it by air abroad, and sometimes the money was smuggled abroad by a member of the banned group who frequently traveled to one of the countries.
The investigations revealed the group's fixed sources of funding, which came from monthly subscriptions of members (inside and outside) and from investments in apartments in a regional country, according to confessions. The total amount of money generated from these sources annually is about 1.9 million dinars, according to initial estimates resulting from the investigations.