Gulf News

Mauritania looking to ban Brotherhoo­d?

‘Extremists responsibl­e for ruining Arab societies, Arab nations’

- MANAMA BY HABIB TOUMI Bureau Chief

ANALYSIS

Less than a week after his party secured a resounding success in the parliament­ary, mayoral and regional elections, Mauritania President Mohammad Ould Abdul Aziz told reporters that he would not tolerate religion being used to serve extremism. “We will never accept the use of religion for the benefit of political extremism,” he said as he reviewed the outcome of the September 15 polls and his party’s way forward.

The ruling Union for the Republic (UPR) and its allies won 120 of the 157 seats in the parliament in September.

Tawassoul, the country’s principal Islamist party, won 14 seats in the first round.

Mauritania has been grappling with the growth of religious influence, especially following the strong showing of Tawassoul in the previous elections.

The Mauritania­n president said religion-based parties have caused a lot of damage. “The misfortune­s of the Arab world are attributed to the occupation of Palestine, but these misfortune­s have increased with the use of religion for political purposes, leading Arab countries to destructio­n and failure while putting Israel in a comfortabl­e situation without [exerting] efforts,” he said.

“Islam belongs to the people of Mauritania with all its components, and not to a particular group. It is not normal to have a party monopolisi­ng Islam.”

During the election campaign trail, the president was quoted as saying that “extremist parties are responsibl­e for ruining Arab societies and Arab nations”.

The president’s remarks on Thursday were understood to imply that authoritie­s were moving to ban the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in all its forms, including Tawassoul and all related financial, commercial and media associatio­ns and organisati­ons.

For Mohammad Saleck Ould Brahim, a Mauritania­n analyst, consultant, researcher and curator, the president’s remarks were in line with the tense political speeches that had marked the elections.

He told Gulf News from the capital Nouakchott: “In such an atmosphere, political opponents usually do not shy away from using expression­s, descriptio­ns and certain concepts, including ‘extremism’, without any scientific or systematic reservatio­n. [They do this] just to score points against one another in [the court of] public opinion. The government had concerns about the growth of Tawassoul ahead of the presidenti­al polls, which will be held within less than one year.”

Mohammad Ishaq Al Kenti, a political analyst said in an op-ed for Al Watan newspaper: “Those who oppose dissolving Tawassoul in the name of democracy forget that the party did not hesitate for a moment to deny democracy when the party leaders thought their interests required it.”

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