Chechen president dedicates Israel’s biggest mosque

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ABU GHOSH, Israel: The head of the Russian republic of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov,  inaugurated Sunday Israel’s largest mosque, in a village near Jerusalem whose inhabitants claim descent from Muslim migrants from the Caucasus.

“Chechens were only able to declare their nationality freely 11 years ago thanks to Akhmad Kadyrov who drafted the Chechen constitution and enabled us to say to the world we are Muslim Chechens,” he told the gathering.

The new US$10-million (7.2 million euros) mosque in the Israeli Arab village of Abu Ghosh, to which Chechnya donated  6 million, is named for the Chechen strongman’s father and previous president, Akhmad Kadyrov, who was killed in a bomb attack in 2004.

The new mosque can accomodate more than three thousand worshippers and covers an area  of 3,200 square metres. — AFP