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Straw has reportedly approved the new strategy.
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CAIRO,
February 17, 2006 (IslamOnline.net) – A leaked British Foreign and
Commonwealth Office (FCO) memo has recommended building ties with the
Muslim Brotherhood after the group's stunning performance in the
Egyptian parliamentary elections, reported the Guardian on
Friday, February 17.
"It
will be difficult for us to maintain credibility for our calls on
Egypt to reform towards further democracy and better governance, if we
fail to engage with the largest and most effective opposition
group," read the memo dated January 17 and addressed to Middle
East minister Kim Howells.
The
document, written by Julie McGregor, a member of the FCO's Arab/Israel
and North Africa Group, was approved by Foreign Secretary Jack Straw,
said the Guardian.
A
British spokeswoman said on Thursday, February 16, that the policy was
that "contact with elected parliamentarians that use peaceful
means to achieve their objectives is normal diplomatic practice."
The
officially banned but tolerated Muslim Brotherhood won 88 seats in
Egypt's parliamentary elections, six times the number of MPs it had in
the outgoing chamber.
By
clinching almost 20 percent of parliamentary seats, the group made the
most serious dent in Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's 24-year-old
autocratic rule.
The
month-long election was marred by vote rigging, vote buying,
intimidation of voters by security forces and state-sponsored violence
that killed over a dozen citizens and injured hundreds others.
Reports
of human rights groups and foreign diplomats all decried the
undemocratic sate-condoned practices that marred the elections.
Contacts
The
memo, leaked to the New Statesman, recommends increasing
"the frequency of working-level contacts with Muslim Brotherhood
parliamentarians, particularly those who are members of parliamentary
committees."
According
to the memo, until 2002, FCO officials "have had infrequent
working-level (second secretary) contact with Muslim Brotherhood
members of parliament.
Since
2002, FCO officials "have had only occasional contacts with MB
members including one or two contacts with parliamentarians and random
unplanned encounters."
The
FCO believes that western governments will benefit from such a
dialogue.
"Engaging
with movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood will help increase our
understanding of 'political Islam' generally, as well as in the
specific Egyptian context," says the memo.
"Incremental
enhancement of contacts may help in discouraging radicalization.
Interacting with 'political Islam' is an important element of our
Engaging with the Islamic World strategy and we should be trying to
influence these groups, who often have significant reach with the
'grass roots'. It also gives us the opportunity to challenge their
perception of the west, including of the UK, and on their
prescriptions for solving the challenges facing Egypt and the region
[sic]."
Quandary
The
document recommends pressing the US and the European Union members to
make contact with the group.
The
growing political clout of Islamic groups has put Western countries in
something of a quandary, caught between supporting democratic
processes and a refusal to have dealings with Islamic groups,
allegedly linked to violence.
The
problem has been particularly sharp with resistance groups such as
Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Palestinian territories, which
have both scored well on the political front despite their US label as
terrorists.
Chris
Doyle, the director of the London-based Council for Arab-British
Understanding, agrees.
"There
has been a certain amount of soul-searching in the Foreign Office. If
they are going to pursue the US's [promotion of] democracy line,
engagement is something they've got to consider. They are already
having to do it in Iraq to some extent with groups of an Islamist
background."
A
memo drawn up by the US State Department has recently called for
direct and permanent political dialogue with the Muslim Brotherhood.
But
the group set as a condition a state supervision over any possible
dialogue with the United States.
"Careful
Handling"
The
British memo, however, urges "careful handling" of contacts
with the Islamist group.
"The
presentation of any change in the way we deal with the Muslim
Brotherhood will have to be carefully handled, in order to safeguard
our bilateral relations with Egypt."
The
memo cited the position of the Egyptian government which perceives the
Muslim Brotherhood as "the political face of a terrorist
organization."
According
to the document, a study prepared last summer with the help of MI6
concluded that "there is no evidence of the current organization
being involved in terrorist activities, although it is possible that
they forward charitable donations to Hamas."
Click
to read the memo