Ashton flown to Morsi’s secret location

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton speaks during a news conference with Egypt's interim Vice-President Mohamed ElBaradei (unseen) at El-Thadiya presidential palace in Cairo.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton speaks during a news conference with Egypt's interim Vice-President Mohamed ElBaradei (unseen) at El-Thadiya presidential palace in Cairo.

Published Jul 31, 2013

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Cairo - Egypt allowed Europe's top diplomat to meet deposed Islamist president Mohamed Morsi on Monday, flying her after dark to Morsi's secret detention facility, but ruling out any role for him in ending the turmoil convulsing the country.

Catherine Ashton, the European Union's foreign policy chief, became the first outsider to see Morsi since he was deposed by the army on July 3, taken into detention and placed under investigation on charges including murder.

His fate - and a deadly crackdown by security forces on his supporters - has raised global anxiety about a possible bid to crush Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, a movement that emerged from decades in the shadows to win power in elections after the 2011 uprising against Hosni Mubarak.

The state's MENA news agency reported early on Wednesday that an African delegation headed by former Malian President Alfa Omar Konari held a one-hour meeting with Morsi.

The agency gave no details on the visit nor when it took place but said some of the delegation's members will host a news conference later on Wednesday after meeting with Arab League officials to discuss the latest developments in Egypt.

Ashton had revealed little about what she called a “friendly, open and very frank” two-hour conversation with the deposed president. An aide said they had “in-depth” talks.

“I've tried to make sure that his family knows he is well,” said Ashton, who has emerged as one of the only figures accepted by both sides as mediator in a conflict that has found the United States cast as a meddling hand.

Flown to the meeting by military helicopter, Ashton said Morsi had access to television and newspapers and was informed about the situation in the country. “I saw where he was,” she said. “I don't know where he is, but I saw the facilities he has.”

Ashton spent Monday shuttling between Egypt's rulers and the Brotherhood to try to pull the country back from more bloodshed.

In a possible sign of progress, a spokesman for Ashton said EU envoy Bernadino Leon would travel to Cairo on Wednesday to “continue the work”.

Nearly 300 people have been killed in violence since Morsi was removed, including 80 of his supporters gunned down at dawn on Saturday as they marched from a month-long vigil at a mosque in northern Cairo.

The crisis has left Washington treading a fine line with a pivotal Arab ally that it funds with $1.3-billion a year in military aid and whose stability is of crucial importance to Middle East peace.

On Tuesday, Lindsey Graham said he and fellow US Republican Senator John McCain - both members of the chamber's Armed Services Committee - hoped to travel to Egypt next week at the request of President Barack Obama. Graham said specifics of the trip, including whom they would meet, had not yet been decided.

Ashton stressed the need for an “inclusive” process to ending the confrontation, one that would necessarily include the Brotherhood. But Egypt's army-installed interim government made clear Morsi would not be part of it.

“No,” interim Vice-President Mohamed ElBaradei told a joint news conference with Ashton when asked whether Morsi could be part of a future process of negotiation and reconciliation.

“I think there is a new road map,” ElBaradei said. “Mr Morsi failed, but the Brotherhood very much continue to be part of the political process and we would like them to continue to be part of the political process.”

He said an end to violence, which the government blames on its foes, would allow the shutdown of the Brotherhood's sit-in protests and create room for dialogue. The Brotherhood accuses the security forces of stirring up the violence to justify their crackdown on the Islamists.

Media have speculated about why the military-backed rulers would have allowed Ashton to meet the ousted leader, who had been kept incommunicado for a month.

She denied carrying an offer to Morsi of “safe exit” if he were to renounce his claim to the presidency.

Many people have suggested such an arrangement could be part of a deal that would allow the Brotherhood to leave the streets and join an army-backed “road map” to civilian rule, but would require Morsi to abandon his historic mandate as Egypt's first freely elected leader.

The road map envisions parliamentary elections in about six months to be followed by presidential polls. Accusing the army of mounting a coup, the Brotherhood says it wants nothing to do with it. The army said it acted in response to mass protests last month against Morsi.

Meeting Morsi was a condition of Ashton's offer to visit Egypt, where she also met the general who removed him and other leaders on her second trip in 12 days.

Since the fall of Mubarak as the Arab Spring revolutions took hold more than two years ago, the Arab world's most populous nation has remained in turmoil, arousing concern among allies in the West and in neighbouring Israel, with which Egypt has had a peace treaty since 1979.

Egypt's authorities say Morsi is being investigated on accusations including murder, stemming from a 2011 jail break when he escaped detention during protests against Mubarak.

The Brotherhood says the accusations, including conspiring with the Palestinian group Hamas, are absurd and trumped up to justify his detention. He has not been officially charged. - Reuters

 

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