Egypt-UAE ties worsen with ‘Brotherhood’ arrests

Egypt-UAE ties worsen with ‘Brotherhood’ arrests
Updated 04 January 2013
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Egypt-UAE ties worsen with ‘Brotherhood’ arrests

Egypt-UAE ties worsen with ‘Brotherhood’ arrests

CAIRO: Mistrustful ties between Egypt and the United Arab Emirates deteriorated further this week with the reported arrest in the UAE of more than 10 Egyptians allegedly spying for Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood.
The report, carried by the UAE newspaper Al-Khaleej, stirred a flurry of diplomacy and other activity as Egypt sought to limit the fall-out, which had the potential to add diplomatic woes to its already dire economic and domestic political problems.
The government of Egyptian President Muhammad Mursi, who hails from the Muslim Brotherhood, has so far made no public comment confirming or denying the information.
But a spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood, Mahmoud Ghozlan, told AFP the accusations in the report had “no basis whatsoever” and were simply part of an “unfair campaign” against Egyptians in the UAE.
One of Mursi’s advisers has been dispatched to the UAE for talks with the Gulf country’s leaders.
And the Egyptian senate has set up a council to “work toward the release” of those arrested, newspapers quoted senate president Ahmed Fahmi as saying.
Al-Khaleej, quoting an unidentified source it said was well-informed, reported on Tuesday that UAE security had broken a Brotherhood spy ring that had been collecting secret defense information on the country and illegally sending “large amounts” of money to its parent group in Egypt.
More than 10 people “belonging to the leadership of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood” had been arrested, the newspaper said, adding that the cell had been recruiting expatriate Egyptians in the UAE.
It reported that the cell had held “secret meetings” across the country with Brotherhood members who instructed it on “the means of changing leadership in Arab countries.”
Any suggestion of regime change is extremely sensitive in the United Arab Emirates and other Gulf states, which have been largely spared the upheaval of the Arab Spring that from early 2011 swept aside autocratic governments in the Middle East and North Africa.