UAE Sees Muslim Brotherhood Threat to Gulf States

Reuters11.10.2012 UAE
UAE Sees Muslim Brotherhood Threat to Gulf States

UAE Sees Muslim Brotherhood Threat to Gulf States

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Gulf countries should work together to stop Islamist group, the Muslim Brotherhood, plotting to undermine governments in the region, the UAE Foreign Minister has said.


The UAE, a major oil exporter and business hub, has arrested around 60 local Islamists this year, accusing them of belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood - which is banned in the country - and conspiring to overthrow the government.

“The Muslim Brotherhood does not believe in the nation state. It does not believe in the sovereignty of the state,” Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan said at joint press conference with the Ukrainian Foreign Minister.

He said there were individuals within the Muslim Brotherhood who would be able to use their “prestige and capabilities to violate the sovereignty, laws and rules of other states”.

“We need to communicate to see if there were individuals or organizations who were using these countries,” he said, without naming the countries he was referring to.

The organization, which rose to power in Egypt after the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak, has consistently sought to reassure Gulf States it has no plan to push for political change beyond Egypt's borders.

President Mohamed Mursi, propelled to power by the Brotherhood, says there is no plan to “export the revolution”.

“Members of the Muslim Brotherhood respect their hosting countries and do not call for bringing down any system of governance in the countries they live in,” Mahmoud Hussein, the Brotherhood's Secretary General, said.

The Muslim Brotherhood organization, founded in Egypt in 1928, is seen as a mentor for Islamist groups in the region.

The group of around 60 men arrested in the UAE this year belonged to the local Islamist group Al Islah.

Last month, local media reported that some of those detained had confessed that their organization was running an armed wing and had been plotting to take power and establish an Islamist state. Al-Islah has since denied this.

The reports said the group was coordinating with Brotherhood organizations in 3 other Gulf countries, and that they had received up to 10 million Dirhams ($3.67 million) from a counterpart in another Gulf country.

Al Islah says it shares a similar ideology with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt but has no direct links and is pushing for only peaceful reforms.

Dubai's Police Chief Dhahi Khalfan said in March there was an “international plot” against Gulf States by the Muslim Brotherhood.

Source: Reuters

 



 
 

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