Archive for Abul Ezz al-Hariry

A number of political activists and opposition figures assaulted in Tahrir Square and in front of the State Council in Dokki this week accused Muslim Brotherhood members of the attacks.

MPs Abul Ezz al-Hariry, Hamdy al-Fakhrany and Atef Maghawry, lawyer Negad al-Boraie and Free Egyptians Party leader Yehia al-Ghazaly Harb say they were verbally and physically assaulted by young people they allege belong to the Brotherhood.

Some of the victims said the assaults constitute a return to the systematic violence used by the former regime on its opposition.

The Brotherhood and its political party have said they have nothing to do with the alleged violence. Ahmed Abu Baraka, the party's legal advisor, told Al-Masry Al-Youm on Thursday that the group does not use violence and called on those who claim to have been attacked to take the issue to court.

Hariry claims the attack he faced in Tahrir is part of ongoing violence perpetrated by Islamist groups since the presidential elections put the Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsy in power. In statements to Al-Masry Al-Youm Wednesday, Hariry alleged that Islamists pressured the government to announce Morsy the winner of the election, igniting a conflict between the Brotherhood and its opponents.

Hariry, a former presidential candidate who belongs to the Socialist Popular Alliance Party, said the violence was planned to intimidate opposition figures and was ignited by hostile statements from Brotherhood leaders.

Tagammu Party lawmaker Atef Maghawry told Al-Masry Al-Youm Wednesday that while he was walking on Mohamed Mahmoud Street, a group of Brotherhood members who were participating in a pro-Morsy protest attacked him and ripped his clothes in the presence of Freedom and Justice Party MP Azzab Mostafa. The attack Tuesday came after he criticised Morsy's decision to reinstate the People's Assembly at a conference at the Journalists Syndicate the same day.

Maghawry said he then filed a report with the police in which he accused Brotherhood Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie, Morsy and the head of the FJP of inciting violence and marginalizing opponents of Morsy's decision.

Harb was also reportedly assaulted and insulted Tuesday while his party was protesting in front of the State Council on Tuesday to reject Morsy's move.

Boraie, who earlier reported that supporters of the decision splashed water on his face and insulted him as he was leaving an administrative court, said he is astonished Brotherhood leaders have not apologized for the events.

Political science professor Iglal Rafaat claimed the Brotherhood is using the same methods of the dissolved National Democratic Party to deal with its opposition and called on the group to review its practices. Yasser al-Azabawy, a researcher at Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, also said these incidents raise concerns about how the Brotherhood will deal with opponents.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Negotiations to choose a single “revolutionary presidential candidate” that leftist and revolutionary forces could unite behind have failed, Al-Masry Al-Youm learned.

Independent candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi, leftist Tagammu Party candidate Hesham al-Bastawisi and Popular Socialist Alliance candidate Abul Ezz al-Hariry had met at the National Association for Change on Monday to discuss supporting a single candidate.

Negotiations between those three candidates, as well as independent candidates Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh and Khaled Ali, had started in April toward reaching an agreement to consolidate support to face former regime figures, such as former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq and former Foreign Minister Amr Moussa.

The candidates had agreed to form a unified program that achieves the goals of the revolution, including building a civil and modern state that prioritizes law and equality among all Egyptians.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Wafd Party MP Ahmed Attalah has called for presidential candidate Abul Ezz al-Hariry to be referred to Parliament’s ethics committee for saying on a satellite TV channel that Parliament practices “political striptease.”

People’s Assembly Speaker Saad al-Katatny has promised to investigate the matter.

Wasat Party MP Essam Sultan, however, objected to an investigation, saying Parliament is not above criticism.

“This is the price of public service,” he said.

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Presidential candidates Hamdeen Sabbahi, Abul Ezz al-Hariry and Hesham al-Bastawisi warned Sunday of attempts to drag Egypt into “chaotic scenarios” and condemned the violence last week near the Defense Ministry in Abbasseya that claimed 12 lives.

In a joint statement, the three candidates said these scenarios warrant legitimate concerns of a possible military coup, the postponement of the presidential election, and the prolonging of the transitional phase.

The statement went on to say that Egypt is going through a momentous time in its history. They called on all revolutionary forces to unite to complete the 25 January revolution in spite of those seeking to abort it.

The candidates said they fully respect people’s right to organize peaceful protests and sit-ins, but condemned any attacks on public or private facilities.

The three leftist candidates said they would soon choose a single candidate to represent the revolution in the presidential election.

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The Presidential Elections Commission announced Thursday the final list of candidates qualified to run in the election slated for 23 and 24 May.

The 13 candidates are: Freedom and Justice Party nominee Mohamed Morsy, Socialist Popular Alliance Party nominee Abul Ezz al-Hariry, Democratic Generation Party nominee Mohamed Fawzy Eissa, Democratic Peace Party nominee Hossam Khairallah, Salafi-oriented Asala Party nominee Abdullah al-Ashal, Tagammu Party nominee Hesham al-Bastawisi, and independents former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq, former Arab League head Amr Moussa, Islamist reformer Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh, Mahmoud Hossam Galal, Islamist Mohamed Selim al-Awa, Nasserist Hamdeen Sabbahi and leftist attorney Khaled Ali.

Shafiq was included on the list after appealing an earlier commission decision excluding him from running based on the recently-approved Political Isolation Law, which strips top-level Mubarak officials of political rights for 10 years.

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The State Council administrative court ordered presidential hopeful Khairat al-Shater as well as the government to provide a copy of the amnesty decision issued by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces which pardoned him.

The court decided on Tuesday to adjourn the first hearing in the appeal filed by MP and presidential nominee Abul Ezz al-Hariry against the SCAF-issued pardon of Shater, the Muslim Brotherhood’s presidential candidate.

In the lawsuit filed against Head of the Presidential Elections Commission Farouk Sultan as well as Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi and Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim, Hariry said the amnesty decision was illegal and in violation of the Constitutional Declaration.

The session was attended by Shater’s lawyer Abdel Moneim Abdel Maqsoud.

Translated from Al-Masry Al-Youm
 

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Today’s papers are bursting with information about presidential candidates after Sunday’s deadline for presidential nominations.

State-run Al-Ahram presents a brief biography of all 23 candidates who qualified to run, each headed by a single headline supposedly capturing the candidate’s spirit.

The 70-year-old lawyer Mohamed Selim al-Awa is “on the path of Gandhi,” according to the state daily, while the litigious Mortada Mansour is presented as “daring.”  Abul Ezz al-Hariry meanwhile is “the constant troublemaker.”

Independent Youm7 leads with the headline that Omar Suleiman — a former intelligence and close associated of ex-President Hosni Mubarak — is Israel’s preferred candidate.

The offensive against Suleiman continues on page five, where it is reported that Suleiman’s opponents will “fight” to prevent Suleiman from becoming president.

Al-Wafd on its front page declares that Suleiman, or “the General,” as the paper refers to him, is “reconquering Mubarak’s throne.”

Going against the tide as usual, Hanan Khawasek dedicates her column in Al-Wafd today to trashing the presidential candidates before writing a eulogy for Suleiman.

“We perhaps don’t know personal details about him or his work other than his extreme modesty, concealing a sharp intelligence — so much so that he is nicknamed the ‘cunning fox’,” Khawasek writes.

Al-Ahram publishes the results of an opinion poll of 1,200 people conducted between 31 March and 3 April.

According to the survey, Amr Moussa and Hazem Salah Abu Ismail are the front-runners, with 30 percent and 28 percent respectively, while Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh is trailing in third with 8 percent.

The survey also found that 94 percent of those surveyed support a presidential system, and that 33 percent of people who planned to vote for Abu Ismail, who may be disqualified after the revelation that his mother had American nationality, would vote for Abouel Fotouh in the event of Abu Ismail being disqualified.

Al-Ahram also reports that the People’s Assembly suggestions committee has rejected a draft law presented by MP Mohamed Abdu that would have canceled women’s right to khula, a kind of divorce Muslim women can obtain if they pay back their marriage settlement.

Deputy head of the Wafd Party Ahmed Ezz al-Arab despairs about the current political situation in an opinion piece in Al-Wafd, writing that the counter-revolution is about to finish off the January 25 uprising and that the “coming dictatorship” may be religious, rather than military, in character.

Privately owned Al-Tahrir doesn’t allow presidential elections news to interfere with its usual Muslim Brotherhood bashing. Writing about the troubled Constituent Assembly, it asks sarcastically: “Why not convene it in the supreme guide’s office?”

The Salafi-oriented Nour Party, in its eponymously named mouthpiece paper, has a double-page spread on the “hostile plans to tarnish Islamist forces.” It says Zionists and Americans are “waging war” using Egyptian agents because the removal of Mubarak and his allies made the US and Israel “utter cries of regret.”

Liberals are joining in the attack as well in the form of a media campaign against Islamists, Nour says, prompting Nour Party Shura Council member Mohamed al-Azab to ask, “What have Islamists done to justify this smearing by these biased people?”

Egypt’s papers:

Al-Ahram: Daily, state-run, largest distribution in Egypt

Al-Akhbar: Daily, state-run, second to Al-Ahram in institutional size

Al-Gomhurriya: Daily, state-run

Rose al-Youssef: Daily, state-run

Al-Dostour: Daily, privately owned

Al-Shorouk: Daily, privately owned

Al-Wafd: Daily, published by the liberal Wafd Party

Youm7: Daily, privately owned

Al-Tahrir: Daily, privately owned

Freedom and Justice: Daily, published by the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party

Sawt al-Umma: Weekly, privately owned

Al-Arabi: Weekly, published by the Nasserist Party

Al-Nour: Official paper of the Salafi Nour Party

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The Presidential Elections Commission sent a letter to the Foreign Ministry Thursday inquiring if six presidential candidates, their parents or wives have dual nationalities.

Egyptian diplomatic delegations abroad are to inquire about Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh, Amr Moussa, Hossam Khairallah, Abul Ezz al-Hariry, Mohamed Fawzy, candidate of Democratic Generation Party, and Ahmed Awad al-Saeedy, the candidate of Egypt National Party, according to an Egyptian diplomatic source.

Laws governing presidential elections, which are scheduled for 23 and 24 May, stipulate that the candidate, his or her parents and spouse must be Egyptian nationals without another nationality.

The head of the elections commission said in a phone interview Tuesday with Al-Hayat 2 satellite channel that the committee would apply the law to anyone who violates candidacy requirements or procedures.

The mother of at least one presidential candidate holds dual nationality, Al-Masry Al-Youm cited a senior security source as saying.

Salafi presidential hopeful Hazem Abu Ismail has denied rumors that his mother is American. He claimed during conferences in Mansoura in the Daqahlia Governorate Thursday that the US is spending millions of dollars to spread chaos in Egypt and that when it failed to tarnish his reputation it raised concerns over Christian Egyptians.

“I have received endorsements from tens of thousands of Christians all over Egypt,” he said.

“I have confirmed information about attempts to rig the presidential elections and the indications are clear. First, when Egyptians in Saudi Arabia tried to register their names for voting, they were surprised that all their data was registered in advance. The second indication is that the Ministry of Interior has issued IDs for soldiers to vote in the presidential elections [for the candidate the government wants],” Ismail alleged.
 

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