Egypt Urges Arabs to Copy Saudi on Brotherhood Terror Tag

W460

Egypt on Friday welcomed Saudi Arabia's decision to list the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization and called on other Arab countries to follow suit.

The Saudi move further isolates the Brotherhood of deposed Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi, already designated by Egypt as a terrorist group following a suicide bombing that killed 15 people in a police station in December.

The group condemned the bombing and has denied involvement in any of the violence rocking Egypt since Morsi was ousted by the military in July.

"We welcome the Saudi decision ... which shows the depth of cooperation and solidarity between the two countries," Egypt's foreign ministry spokesman Badr Abdelatty told Agence France Presse.

Saudi Arabia hailed Morsi's overthrow and pledged billions of dollars to Egypt's military-installed interim government.

"We look forward to see other countries which signed the 1998 Arab League counter-terrorism treaty follow the Saudi path and respect their commitments under the treaty," Abdelatty added.

The agreement has been ratified by 18 of the Arab League's 22 members, an official of the Cairo-based organisation previously told AFP.

The Brotherhood, the largest Islamic movement in the region with a presence in most Arab countries, said it was "surprised" and "pained" by the Saudi decision.

"This new position the kingdom contrasts sharply with the history of its relations with the Brotherhood," the group said.

"History has always shown that the Brotherhood has been a leader in spreading true Islamic thinking ... without extremism, as many of the kingdom's scholars and leaders can testify."

Morsi and dozens of Brotherhood leaders face trial in Egypt on a number of charges, including collusion with militants to carry out attacks.

Among them is Yousef Qaradawi, a prominent Egyptian-born cleric based in Qatar.

The Saudi move comes two days after Riyadh, Manama and Abu Dhabi recalled their ambassadors from Doha, which supports Islamist groups in the region and was a backer of the Brotherhood.

Cairo-Doha ties have deteriorated since Morsi's overthrow and the subsequent deadly crackdown on his supporters that has left more than 1,400 dead and thousands of others behind bars.

Al-Jazeera television, based in Qatar, has also incensed Egypt's government with its coverage of the crackdown.

Comments 3
Missing VINCENT 07 March 2014, 22:26

Good start

Missing greatpierro 08 March 2014, 08:26

Big john Camp David accords have been a magnificent opportunity for Egypt. It regained Sinaii, the oil an gas fields, Sharam el Cheikh tourist industry etc... It also gained a big yearly check from the USA and most of all Egypt government resources were diverted from military to civilian spending.
The Islamist that came shortly onto power with Morsi would have brought back Egypt centuries back in the dark ages with their autocratic government, their alliance with Iran, and their creation of a militia to destabilize the authority of the institutions. The military have had no other choice but to step in to save Egypt.

Thumb kanaanljdid 08 March 2014, 11:35

They understood what Lebanon is failing to understand currently