Yemeni activist Karman: ‘Incidents in Egypt are also worrying for the future of the countries experiencing Arab Spring’.
Yemeni human rights activist Tawakkol Karman, the first Arab woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize 2011, said that the military coup in Egypt, which ousted the country’s first democratically elected president Mohammad Morsi, deepened the polarisation instead of finding a solution to it.
“Morsi could not do his duty accurately for one year because of the obstacles of the shadow government,” said Karman speaking to Anadolu Agency. “The army arrested the Muslim Brotherhood members, killing some of them, and shut down media institutions. This is not serving for the will of the public but is clearly a coup.”
Stressing that the coup was carried out against the democracy and revolution of Egypt, Karman said the army could not ensure consensus in the country.
“Things happening in Egypt are also worrying for the future of those countries who experienced Arab Spring,” she said expressing her wishes for the return of democracy in the country.
Recently, she retracted earlier support for protests in Egypt against the now ousted leader Mohamed Morsi.
“I have fallen victim to a big conspiracy I did not know the dimensions of, and apologise to all of the free world for my participation in demanding the resignation of the first president elected democratically in Egypt,” she said on her Facebook account.