via Muslim Brotherhood role in GCC to be debated at summit | GulfNews.com.
The threat of the Muslim Brotherhood will
be discussed by the leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
leaders at their meeting in Bahrain in December, Kuwaiti media claimed.
The request to include the Gulf role of
the Islamist organisation in the summit agenda was made by a GCC
country, Kuwait Arabic newspaper Al Shahed reported on Tuesday.
“The country said that the summit
should discuss the role of the Muslim Brotherhood in the Gulf countries
and that the issue should be given priority because of its serious
implications,” government sources told the Kuwaiti newspaper.
According to the daily, the GCC
has been urged “to adopt unified decisions against the attitudes and
behaviour of the Muslim Brotherhood and against its blatant interference
in the domestic affairs of the member counties.”
“The Islamist organisation is accused of
seeking to topple the political regimes in the GCC by inciting the
street against the governments and seeking to extend the so-called Arab
Spring to the Gulf countries with the support of foreign countries set
to benefit from the development,” the sources that the paper did not
identify, said.
Security reports to be submitted to the
summit indicate that several non-Gulf members of the Muslim Brotherhood
have been involved in events that have hit GCC countries. The latest
involvement was a rally held in Kuwait earlier this month, the sources
said.
Kuwaiti news site Citytalks said that the
discussion of the Muslim Brotherhood’s role in the GCC would not be
mentioned in the final communique to be issued in Manama, the host
capital of the next summit.
Earlier this month, UAE Foreign Minister
Shaikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan denounced the Muslim Brotherhood as
“an organisation which encroaches upon sovereignty and integrity of
nations”.
“The Muslim Brotherhood’s thinking does
not recognise borders or sovereignty of nations,” Shaikh Abdullah said.
“So, it is not unusual that the international Brotherhood organisation
works to make inroads upon sovereignty and laws of countries,” Shaikh
Abdullah said as he commented on the UAE’s talks with other countries to
prevent the Muslim Brotherhood’s acts in the country.
The GCC:
The six-member Gulf Cooperation Council
(GCC)—Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE), Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain
and Oman—represents one of the wealthiest country groupings in the
world.
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