Monday, May 18, 2015

Middle East Turmoil If Egypt's Mursi Executed: Turkish Presidency


Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan

Turkey's presidential spokesman said on Monday the Middle East would be thrown into turmoil if Egypt carried out its death sentences on former president Mohamed Mursi and other senior Islamists.

An Egyptian court on Sunday sought the death penalty for Mursi and 106 supporters of his Muslim Brotherhood, in connection with a mass jail-break in 2011. A final ruling is expected on June 2.

Reuters reports:
Ibrahim Kalin told a news conference in Ankara the sentences were a "breach of justice" and called on the international community to speak out more strongly against them.

"The subject demands universal attention. The execution orders and carrying them out will push the Middle East into turmoil," he said.

Turkey would work with the U.N. Human Rights Commission following the sentences, and take "all necessary steps", he added.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan is a vocal supporter of Mursi, Egypt's first democratically-elected president, and relations with Egypt have soured since he was forced from power by the army in 2013.

Diplomatic ties between the former regional allies were broken off after Erdogan repeatedly accused the new Egyptian government of carrying out a coup.

Speaking to Egypt's state news agency, an unnamed Egyptian official said Cairo was "unsurprised" by the comments.

"The current regime in Turkey is a reflection of the ideas of the terrorist Muslim Brotherhood," the official added.
The Turkish government's backing for the Muslim Brotherhood and Islamist groups across the Middle East has harmed Ankara's relations with other regional partners, including Saudi Arabia and Libya, since the Arab Spring erupted four years ago.

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