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9 Jan, 2026 21:32

UAE cuts grants for studying in UK over extremism fears – media

The Emirates has restricted funding for students wishing to study in Britain over Muslim Brotherhood influence on campuses
UAE cuts grants for studying in UK over extremism fears – media

The United Arab Emirates has opted to restrict students from enrolling at UK universities over radicalization fears, cutting its educational grants program, according to British media reports.

The Gulf country believes students there are targeted by Islamist groups while on British campuses, in particular the Muslim Brotherhood, The Times reported, citing sources with direct knowledge of the move. The transnational Islamist organization is recognized as a terrorist group in the UAE.  

The UAE said it will no longer provide lavish educational grants, which cover tuition, accommodation, and other expenses for students wishing to study in the UK. It is not imposing a blanket ban on studying in the country, and those willing to pay for their education are still free to do so.

Last June, the Emirati higher education ministry published a list of universities for which scholarship grants would be approved, with no British institutions mentioned. The omission was not an oversight, and the latest move had been under consideration for some time, a source familiar with the discussions told Financial Times.  

“[The UAE] don’t want their kids to be radicalized on campus,” the source stated.

The Emirates took action against the Muslim Brotherhood, a loosely organized international Islamist network that originally emerged in Egypt in the 1920s, following the 2011 so-called ‘Arab Spring’. The series of uprisings driven by Islamists toppled multiple governments across the Middle East and North Africa, plunging several nations, including Syria and Libya, into years of bloody civil war.  

The UAE outlawed the organization domestically and has been pushing for international recognition of the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist group. The group has already been outlawed in Russia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and several other nations.  

Late last year, US President Donald Trump designated several Muslim Brotherhood offshoots and affiliated individuals as terrorists, yet stopped short of labeling the organization itself as such. France has been considering a similar move, with a government report released last May explicitly stating the country’s authorities positively established “the anti-Republican and subversive nature of the Muslim Brotherhood.”

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