Istanbul: Turkey would welcome exiled leaders of Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood who have come under pressure to leave Qatar, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said.
A Brotherhood official said on Saturday that several members of the group were relocating after Qatar came under enormous pressure from other Gulf Arab states to cut support for the Islamist group.
“If they make any request to come to Turkey, we will review their request,” Erdogan was quoted as telling reporters on his plane back from an official trip to Qatar late on Monday.
“If there are any reasons that would prevent them from coming to Turkey, they would be assessed. And if there aren’t any obstacles, they would be granted the ease that is granted to everyone,” he said.
Turkey and Qatar have been some of the staunchest supporters of the Brotherhood, the movement of Egypt’s former president Mohammad Mursi who was ousted by the army last July following mass protests against his turbulent year-long rule.
Ahmet Uysal, a Turkish political analyst at the Institute of Middle Eastern Studies at Marmara University, said that Erdogan’s visit to Qatar aimed “to discuss the political issues in the region and ways of cooperation among the countries”.
The Brotherhood, he said, was unlikley to have dominated the talks. “I don’t think it will the main focus of the talks... The most important thing is the future of both Iraq and Syria. This will be the focus of the talks.”
Erdogan’s visit to Qatar, Uysal said, could be a prelude to visits by the Turkish president to other Arab Gulf states, he said. “There is some tension, but this will go in the future,.”
“The visit will open new pages in the (relations among countries) in the region,” he said.
Gulf states have grown increasingly concerned about the Brotherhood after its prominent role in the Arab Spring, viewing the movement as a threat to their monarchic rule.
Egypt’s military-installed authorities designated the Brotherhood a “terrorist organisation” last December.
Since then, the group’s exiled leaders set up headquarters in several countries including Turkey, to where the leadership in Doha may now relocate.
- with inputs from AFP