Al-Jazeera working to stoke up protests in US
The media outlets of the Muslim Brotherhood always work to use developments on the ground everywhere to serve the interests of this Islamist group.
The Qatari news channel, al-Jazeera, has a knack for
playing this role. This was clear in al-Jazeera's coverage of the protests that
erupted following the death at the hands of American police of black American
man, George Floyd, in May this year.
Using the event
Al-Jazeera's journalists, hosts, and presenters used the
protests in posting comments on their social media accounts and pages. In these
comments, they encouraged Americans to stage even more protests and riots.
Al-Jazeera hostess, Ola al-Fares, was at the forefront in
this regard. On June 3, she posted a comment to her Twitter account, in which
she claimed that some rulers had paid U.S. President Donald Trump tens of
millions of dollars so that they could preserve their thrones.
Al-Fares had, however, deleted the comment a short time
later after she came under fire from her followers.
In the same comment, al-Fares claimed that Palestinian
American national Mahmud Abu Miala reported Floyd to police for $20.
Al-Fares' followers accused her of abusing the
Palestinians' cause, even as her channel keeps claiming that it backs the same
cause.
Al-Jazeera hostess, Ghada Owuies, did the same. She
posted a series of comments on her Twitter account to incite violence against
American police.
Qatari lying
Al-Jazeera was keen on airing videos of police violence,
apparently to stoke up anger against police. It posted reports to its website
about discrimination across the U.S.
Muslim Brotherhood members also appeared in the protests
that erupted in a number of American states.
Al-Jazeera took photos of the same people, raising
placards on which they wrote "We are not Arabs who can be killed in
silence".
Nevertheless, some U.S. activists challenged the
authenticity of the photos and accused al-Jazeera of fabrication.




