A pro-democracy think tank with links to German Chancellor Angela Merkel's party said Thursday it is closing its office in Abu Dhabi after officials there ordered that it end its activities in the United Arab Emirates. The Konrad Adenauer Foundation's chairman, Hans-Gert Poettering, said no "comprehensible reasons" were given for the decision, which he described as unexpected and sudden.
The organisation was one of several pro-democracy and human rights groups targeted in a separate recent crackdown by the Egyptian government, months after a popular uprising that ousted long-time ruler Hosni Mubarak. The US-allied UAE has not been hit by the unrest that has spread across the Middle East in the past year, including in nearby Bahrain. UAE authorities have moved aggressively against any signs of dissent that could challenge the country's tight political controls. "After our experiences in Egypt, we not only regret this decision, but consider it an alarm signal if non-governmental organisations and political foundations are increasingly unwanted in the Arab world," Poettering said in a statement.
Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle twice pressed his UAE counterpart to reconsider the decision over the past week, according to Westerwelle's ministry. Merkel herself said she regrets the closure - but added that it apparently was part of a wider move by UAE authorities. Officials there say the decision "is not directed against the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, but involves the overall closure of foundations," Merkel told reporters in Berlin. She added that Germany would try to "continue close co-operation" with the UAE.
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