UAE, Lebanon and Muslim Brotherhood
Amnesty International warns Abdul Rahman al-Qaradawi could be at risk of human rights violations if extradited to UAE.
Qaradawi, an Egyptian opposition activist wanted by Cairo and son of the late spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, a Lebanese judicial official told AFP on Sunday.
The UAE has detained Abdul Rahman Al Qaradawi after seeking his extradition from Lebanon, state news agency Wam reported on Friday. Mr Al Qaradawi faces charges of "engaging in activities that aim to stir and undermine public security",
The United Arab Emirates received from the competent authorities in Lebanon the suspect Abdul Rahman Al Qaradawi, based on a provisional arrest request iss..
Al-Qaradawi's legal troubles stem from a 2017 conviction in Egypt. Lebanese authorities interrogated him about this verdict and an extradition request from the UAE. His arrest followed a widely shared video where he criticised authorities in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt while walking around Damascus' Umayyad Mosque.
Qaradawi, an Egyptian opposition activist wanted by Cairo and son of the late spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, a Lebanese judicial official tells AFP. Qaradawi, also a poet, was detained on Saturday as he arrived from Syria at the Masnaa border crossing,
According to LBCI sources, the Lebanese Public Prosecutor's Office has yet to receive the case file for Abdul Rahman al-Qaradawi. As a result, no hearing date has been set. If the General Security refers the file on Monday,
Lebanese authorities have detained Abdul Rahman al-Qaradawi, an Egyptian opposition activist and the son of the late Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader Yusuf al-Qaradawi, according to a Lebanese ...
Joseph Aoun has wide-reaching support, including from Hezbollah and Israel. The political Hezbollah faction as well as its parliamentary ally, the Amal Movement, had abstained from voting, she said. Lebanon's military wing of Hezbollah is considered a terrorist group by several countries,
Most importantly, the commission offers a truism about Israel’s future survival: The Jewish state cannot afford to lose even one major war. In that regard — unsurprisingly given its composition — the commission points to Iran as the country’s long-term primary threat.