Al-Muntada Trust

The Al-Muntada Trust is an international charitable organisation, initially founded in the United Kingdom which aims to provide food, education and community outreach in impoverished countries.

Although the organisation has done good work in these areas, it has also been heavily criticised for its links to militant Islamist organisations and support for Islamic fundamentalism, as described in a 2005 report from The Center for Security Policy:

The charity funded an armed group that launched a rebellion in Yobe State in 2004, and it has reportedly also given funds to the brutal paramilitary group Boko Haram.

In 2004 the charity's director, Sheik Muhiddeen Abdullahi, was arrested. It was discovered that he had conducted millions of dollars worth of financial transactions with the fundamentalist cleric Alhaji Sharu.

In 2012 the Al-Muntada Trust organised a conference to be held at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London. The speakers who were invited to the event included Abd al-Aziz Fawzan al-Fawzan, who said that all "infidels", even one's relatives, should be hated and that homosexuality is an "abomination"; Muhammed Abd Al-Rahmen Al-Arifi, who says that the US and its allies are "infidel countries" and regards Shia Muslims as "evil"; the all-round nut Haitham al-Haddad; and Nabil Al-Awadhi, who says that homosexuals and emos are dangers to society, that Europeans are in the thrall of Satan, and that there should be video games about killing Jews. The conference was cancelled following complaints.

Other fundamentalists hosted by the charity in the past include Ali Al-Timimi, who was sentenced to life in prison after recruiting fighters for the Taliban; Abuz Zubair, owner of the extremist forum Islamic Awakening; and Khalid Yasin, a 9/11 truther who says that homosexuals should be executed.