The Majalla putting latest CEMO seminar under spotlight

PARIS (Special) – The French edition of The Majalla magazine specified a major chunk of its coverage this week to the latest seminar by the Center for Middle East Studies in Paris (CEMO) about the abuse of human rights by Islamist movements, especially the Muslim Brotherhood.
The seminar, the
magazine said, succeeded in throwing light on the use of human rights by the
Islamists in reaching their political and social goals.
In commenting on
discussions during the seminar, The Majalla said the European leftist's concept
of human rights is truncated because it only focuses on political rights and
freedom of speech.
This concept, it added,
overlooks the right to a happy life, the right to education and the right to
healthcare.
The magazine focused on
an intervention by French Senator Valérie Boyer who described Turkey as a "European
ailment".
Valérie dwelt on the hazards Turkish policies
are causing to European security.
The Majalla quoted CEMO
Director Abdel Rahim Ali as raising questions about the way European
progressives and rights advocates understand human rights and their defense of
the leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, in prison in Egypt since 2013 against
the background of their involvement in cases of terrorism.
The magazine quoted Ali
as clarifying that Abdullah Azzam, the founder of al-Qaeda and the ideological
reference of Osama bin Laden, was a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Ali noted that Sayed
Qotb, the principal theoretician of the Muslim Brotherhood and a disciple of
Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Bana, is the main term of reference of
al-Qaeda and
Ayatullah Khomeini.
He added that Yusuf al-Qaradawi, an outstanding member of
the Brotherhood, had issued hundreds of fatwas that incite suicide attacks on
Europeans, Americans, Jews, Christians and Arab nationalists.
"Qaradawi encourages Muslims living in Europe not to
integrate into European societies," Ali said.
He added that this Muslim Brotherhood sheikh even encourages
Muslims to invade the European continent.
The Majalla especially focused on Ali's questions about
whether European rights groups that oppose fascism know the reality of the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Ali said the Brotherhood was infatuated with Adolf Hitler.
The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem Amin al-Husseini, for example, Ali said, was a
disciple of al-Bana and a main collaborator with Nazi Germany and Fascist
Italy.
He said the Muslim Brotherhood welcomed al-Husseini as a
hero in Cairo in 1945 after he escaped his prison cell in France where he was
indicted for committing crimes against humanity.
The Majalla also focused on the information Ali mentioned
about Islamists' use of human rights as a weapon against western states.
France, Ali said, suffered at the hands of Islamists for
almost a third of a century, beginning with the Paris Metro attacks in 1995.
These attacks, he added, were the culmination of the
ideology people like al-Qaradawi promoted for a long time, along with the
Association of Islamist Organizations in France.
The Majallah said those advocating human rights from a
political perspective only overlook the real needs of people in the Middle East
region where civil wars and terrorism are making their masterpieces.