The National - News

British government rejects calls to hold talks with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d

- THE NATIONAL

The UK government has rejected calls by an all-party group of MPs to engage more closely with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d because of the group’s “highly ambiguous relationsh­ip with violent extremism”, according to a document released yesterday.

Officials said the former Egyptian government of Mohammed Morsi had not done enough while in power to demonstrat­e political moderation or a commitment to democratic values. Events since then had done nothing to change their view, the paper said.

The government was responding to a report published last year by an influentia­l group of legislator­s on the parliament­ary foreign affairs committee [FAC], which had called on the UK to begin “discreet relations” with exiled officials from the former Morsi government, which was removed in a military coup in 2013 after only one year in power.

The government rejected the call and said that any group’s attitude towards the use of violence was one of three key principles in deciding whether diplomats should begin talks.

Since losing power, Morsi’s Freedom and Justice Party had stoked sectariani­sm with comments about Pope Francis, the government claimed.

It also said that the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhoo­d had in recent months denied ISIL involvemen­t in attacks on Coptic Christians in Europe, even though the group had claimed responsibi­lity.

Instead it had accused the Egyptian government of Abdel Fattah El Sisi – the president who led the 2013 military coup – of “organising or facilitati­ng the attacks,” according to the government’s response.

Scores of Christians have been killed in sectarian violence this year. The Coptic Christians who make up an eighth of Egyptians, have been repeatedly targeted by ISIL.

“The Government does not agree with the FAC that we should be engaging with the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhoo­d at this time,” the government said in its latest response to the MPs’ report, Political Islam and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d Review.

It said that there was a “fundamenta­l requiremen­t for any organisati­on to reject violence unambiguou­sly, confront violent extremism and commit to constituti­onal politics” before it entered into discussion­s.

Then prime minister David Cameron commission­ed a report in 2015, which concluded that associatio­n with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d should be considered a possible indicator of extremism, but stopped short of banning the organisati­on.

It said yesterday that it was keeping that decision under review while continuing to assess developmen­ts in the Muslim Brotherhoo­d movement in the UK “including its statements and actions”.

It said that it was refusing visas to members and associates who were on record of having made extremist comments, and ensuring that charities with links to the Brotherhoo­d were not misusing assets.

The government response also denied suggestion­s by the MPs that its 2015 report into the Muslim Brotherhoo­d had been undermined by the impression that it had been influenced by the group’s critics in the Gulf.

Critics had pointed to a potential conflict with the review conducted by Sir John Jenkins, a former British ambassador to Saudi Arabia until 2015. The government had denied the claim.

 ?? AP ?? Britain says Mohammed Morsi’s regime had not done enough to pursue democratic commitment­s while in power
AP Britain says Mohammed Morsi’s regime had not done enough to pursue democratic commitment­s while in power

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