Cape Argus

Cairo seeks to isolate Muslim Brotherhoo­d by opposing Qatar

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AS SAUDI Arabia continues to make demands on Qatar, which Qatar has stated are not only unreasonab­le but undoable, Egypt has joined in the chorus of Gulf Co-operation Council countries siding with Saudi Arabia, which dubs the Muslim Brotherhoo­d a terrorist organisati­on.

One of the Saudi demands is that Qatar break ties with groups it considers terrorist organisati­ons, including Gaza-based Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d.

On Monday, Egypt called on Interpol to arrest fugitive members of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, which is banned in Egypt, who are residing in Qatar and Turkey.

A security source said Cairo had sent Interpol a list of fugitives wanted in Egypt for criminal investigat­ions or who have been convicted in criminal cases.

Egypt’s Daily Ahram newspaper reported the list included the spiritual leader of the Brotherhoo­d, Youssef El Qaradawi, Islamist preacher Wagdi Ghonem, former investment minister Yehia Hamed, former prime minister Hesham Qandil, leading Gamaa Al Islamiya figure Tarek El-Zomor, Al Jazeera presenter Ahmed Mansour and Brotherhoo­d youth figure Ahmed El-Moghier.

The list also includes Al Jazeera political analysts Mohamed El-Gawadi and Mohamed El Qudoussi, journalist­s Wael Kandil, Alaa Sadeq, Ramy Jan and Selim Azouz, and Muslim Brotherhoo­d leader Ayman Abdel Ghani, who Cairo says is the mastermind behind the Kataeb Helwan militant group in Cairo.

One of the Saudi demands was also that Qatar close Al Jazeera, based in Doha, claiming the internatio­nal broadcaste­r was giving favourable coverage to groups the Saudis regard as undesirabl­e. Al Jazeera journalist Mahmoud Hussein has been held in Egypt since December. – ANA

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