Erdogan and Brotherhood media: Seriousness in reconciliation with Egypt or maneuver?

On January 16, 2021, media sources reported that the Turkish authorities were considering taking steps to close the Brotherhood’s channels that broadcast from Istanbul and to hand over the group’s fugitive members to Egypt, indicating that Ankara wants to use this decision to reconcile with Cairo after the recent breakthrough in the framework of Gulf reconciliation and the entry of mediators to bring Egypt and Turkey closer.
The sources reported that this decision may be announced in
the coming days, after Ankara realized that its alliance with the Brotherhood
has caused it great damage.
This is not the first time that a decision like this has
been announced. In August 2019, news of the closure of satellite channels
affiliated with the Brotherhood was announced abroad due to disagreements
between employees of El-Sharq and Mekameleen and those in charge of the channels,
namely Ayman Nour and Hamza Zawba, respectively. In addition, there were
sit-ins at these channels due to delayed salaries, which led to a decline in
viewership.
In December 2019, El-Sharq channel, which broadcasts from
Turkey and is financed by Qatar and managed by Ayman Nour, was closed on Facebook
without mention to its viewers, which raised many questions at the time about
the reasons for its closure.
Egyptian move
In February 2015, the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
stated that it had made international contacts to close the satellite channels
of the Brotherhood, which constantly incite the killing and demolition of
Egyptian state institutions by transmitting via European satellites, indicating
that it was necessary to monitor these satellite channels and know their
trends, founders and financing.
Questions arise now about Turkey’s efforts this time to
close the Brotherhood’s channels, and when that is achieved, what are the
implications of this?
Hesham al-Najjar, a researcher specializing in Islamist
movements, told the Reference that the Brotherhood depends mainly on its media
outlets abroad after losing control of the entirety of its activities on the
scene, as was the case in the past, whether its presence and activity in the
political street or even its violent movement and terrorist activity.
Najjar said that the Brotherhood’s channels abroad
represented a tool in the hands of the group to prove that it is present and
still has an impact on incitement and the policy of spreading rumors,
frustration and distortion, as well as to prevent itself from going on the path
of collapse and disintegration, because losing the last card through which the
group was able to gain access to the arena after narrowing all the outlets on
it means the dispersion of its members.
This is all an indication of the danger that the group will
lose these tools by means of the moral payment that they represent to it, to
compensate for its losses and defeats, whether political or its armed battle
against the Egyptian state.
Najjar added that if the Brotherhood’s channels in Turkey are
closed, then the group will search for alternatives, especially as it has other
media outlets such as the Al-Hiwar channel in London, in addition to the group
run by Azmi Bishara. It is then possible for the current leadership of the
group to move closer to this wing to accommodate its discourse.