The Borneo Post

Arab states blacklist Islamist groups, individual­s in Qatar boycott

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DUBAI: The four Arab countries boycotting Qatar added 11 more individual­s and two other entities, including a major group of Islamist scholars, to their “terrorist” blacklists for the Gulf state, Saudi state news agency SPA reported yesterday.

The lists now include the Qatarbased Internatio­nal Union of Muslim Scholars ( IUMS) which was formed in 2004 mostly by clerics belonging to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and is chaired by the influentia­l Sheikh Youssef al- Qaradawi.

A statement issued by Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates ( UAE) and Bahrain said they also blackliste­d the Internatio­nal Islamic Council ( IIC).

“The two entities listed are two terrorist organisati­ons that promote terrorism by using Islamic rhetoric as a cover to facilitate terrorist activities,” the statement said.

The move deepened the rift between the four countries and Qatar, the world’s top gas exporter and host to the biggest US military base in the Middle East.

The countries cut ties with Qatar in June, accusing it of financing militants in Syria and allying with Iran, their regional foe.

The Saudi-led quartet also added 11 individual­s to their lists, including the acting Brotherhoo­d leader Mahmoud Ezzat Ibrahim.

The Muslim Brotherhoo­d movement led the Arab Spring protests in 2011 that toppled some autocrats in the Middle East and North Africa. The Gulf States’ rulers see the group, whose political ideology challenges the principle of dynastic rule, as a security threat.

The IUMS membership includes the Saudi cleric Salman al-Awdah, who was arrested by Saudi authoritie­s in September, the Tunisian Rached Ghannouchi, head of the Ennahda party, and Moroccan scholar Ahmed Raissouni.

Mediation efforts of the Qatar crisis led by Kuwait and shuttle diplomacy by Western officials, including US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, have failed to end what has become the worst rift between Gulf Arab states in years. — Reuters

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