The issue was to be discussed on Tuesday in the Germany-Islam conference chaired by Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich, German broadcaster Deutsche Welle reported.
Security cooperation of the Islamic groups is high on the agenda of the conference, said the newly selected Friedrich, who irritated the Muslim population in Germany earlier this month by asserting that "Islam does not belong in Germany."
The remark by the German minister came on the heels of demands by several major security figures in the country, urging that Muslims should spy on mosques.
Also last year, Berlin's interior minister Erhart Kurting had called on German citizens be cautious about persons with a bizarre appearance.
He also went as far to caution Germans to tip off authorities in case they came across someone with a veiled face, or speaking Arabic or other languages.
Friedrich's Islamophobic remark triggered serious protests by the influential Turkish community in Germany and deepened tensions in the relations between Berlin and major Islamic groups in the country.
The Germany-Islam conference continued on Tuesday in the face of a boycott by a Muslim group who described the discussions as nothing but a "talking shop."
Another mosque group was thrown out by the government due to allegations that it may be a criminal organization.
Meanwhile, Aiman Mazyek, head of the multi-ethnic Central Council of Muslims, expressed pessimism over the achievements reached in the conference.
The talks have achieved little to overcome discrimination against Muslims and are just "a security conference in disguise."
source : http://abna.ir