“No role for Muslim Brotherhood”AlSisi told a Kuwaiti newspaper

Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi said in an exclusive
interview published late Friday that there is “no role for the Muslim
Brotherhood as long as [he] stays in power,” asserting that the Egyptian people
would not accept the return of the Brotherhood to power, because their
“unviable” ideology.
During the interview with the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Shahed,
El-Sisi spoke on issues of Arab national security, the influx of terrorists in
Syria, Egypt’s relationship with Kuwait, and several domestic issues.
He talked on the importance of cooperation by the Arab
States to protect Arab national security from dangers faced by the Arab
nations, adding that such a relationship would create a state of deterrence to
those who aim to assault the Arab world.
El-Sisi also affirmed the depth of Egypt and Kuwait’s
special relationship, praising the role of Kuwait’s Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmed
Al-Jaber Al-Sabah in supporting Egypt in critical times.
Speaking on the Arab
Spring, El-Sisi diagnosed the phenomena as a “wrong treatment to a wrong
reality”, adding that the “constructive chaos left destruction and havoc in
several Arab states.”
El-Sisi blamed that chaos on the Brotherhood, due to their
roles in countries like Yemen and Libya, while discussing his fear of where the
36,000 terrorists involved in the crisis in Syria, which has only just started
to recover from the war, would go.
“Where will they go after the war in Syria is over,
especially if they will be used by intelligence bodies who seek to cause
destruction in the region?” he wondered.
El-Sisi also reiterated the need of renewing religious
discourse, stressing that religion doesn’t contradict with life.
He said that the problem falls on a false understanding of
religious texts, as well as them being used incorrectly to push agendas.
The president also added that Egypt never conspired against
anyone, despite offenses which emerged from “an Arab state” and other
harassment from regional states.
He also spoke about economic reforms in Egypt, adding that
the plan was not forced on Egypt, but was homegrown and would continue despite
objections over it.
He also called on media outlets to focus on positive aspects
and refrain from spreading hatred and negativity across the Arab states, which
he said could be a reason for destruction and strife.