Archive for Emad Abdel Ghafour

Former Nour Party head Emad Abdel Ghafour has announced the formation of the Al-Watan Party, as well as a new alliance with former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail.

In a conference Tuesday at the Al-Azhar Conference Center, Abdel Ghafour said the new party will be open to all Salafis and seeks Sharia implementation through actions and not only slogans. He added that the party will contest upcoming parliamentary elections.

Abdel Ghafour had earlier resigned as leader of the Salafi-oriented Nour Party.

Youssry Hammad, the vice president of the new party, said that it will include both youth and more experienced members in its quest to protect Sharia, which is considers a popular demand.

He added that the party has a plan for national projects that will improve the economy, restore the middle class and address the needs of persons with disabilities.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The Nour Party remains the sole political arm of the Salafi Dawah, a statement by the group comprising leading Salafi scholars said on Monday, urging followers to join and provide financial support to the party which saw a wave of defections by leading figures last week.

“It is unimaginable that one group would provide support to more than one party simultaneously or have two political arms. Nour Party is the political arm of the Salafi Daawa based on the decision by its consultancy council on 30 June 2011," the statement said.

The statement urged followers of the Salafi political current to financially support the party during the upcoming parliamentary elections.

Earlier this month, party chairman Emad Abdel Ghafour announced his resignation and his plans to establish Watan Party, which he said would be the largest gathering of Islamist and nationalist groups. News reports said former presidential runner and ultraconservative Salafi cleric Hazem Salah Abu Ismail would chair the new entity.

Independent daily al-Shorouk said 150 Nour Party officials in 23 governorates resigned following a meeting last Tuesday. The quitting members will announce details for establishing Watan Party in a press conference tomorrow, Tuesday.
 

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One hundred and fifty members of the Salafi Nour Party from 23 governorates submitted their resignation from the party following a meeting on Tuesday.

“We decided to resign from the party, and we wish it success. We will form a new political entity, which will be announced soon,” former party spokesperson Mohamed Nour told state-run news agency MENA.

Nour attributed the resignations to differences with the political views the party has adopted in the recent period.

Party head Emad Abdel Ghafour has not yet resigned, Nour said, and is still considering the situation.

Asked if the withdrawals from the party would mean separation from the Salafi Dawah as well, Nour said that both continuing and resigning members follow Salafi thought, and the differences only concern political views and administration.

Regarding reports that former presidential hopeful Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, who is currently forming his own political party, would be involved with the “new political entity,” Nour said all figures faithful to the new movement’s thought could join, of course including Abu Ismail.  

Nour added that the party welcomes everyone, including non-Salafis, as long as they believe Islamic Sharia should be the basic of governance. He said the country needs politicians who can serve without political conflicts.

Most of the Nour Party figures who quit were members of the now-dissolved People’s Assembly or the Shura Council.

Edited translation from MENA

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A leading figure in the Salafi Dawah group said Monday that Emad Abdel Ghafour, head of the Salafi Nour Party, and the Salafi preacher Hazem Salah Abu Ismail agreed to form a new political alliance.

Sources from the party told Al-Masry Al-Youm Sunday that Abdel Ghafour, spokespeople Yousry Hammad and Mohamed Nour and other party leaders plan to resign Tuesday.

Hisham Abul Nasr, head of the Salafi Dawah branch in Giza, told Al-Masry Al-Youm that the new alliance will be named “Al-Watan,” and will be headed by Abu Ismail with Abdel Ghafour as his first deputy.

Abdel Ghafour and 95 percent of the party youths in greater Cairo are resigning on Tuesday to join the new party, Abul Nasr added.

He said the new alliance is negotiating with all Islamist parties and forces to join and face liberal parties in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

Ayman Elias of Abu Ismail’s campaign said the new party is not responsible for any divisions within the Nour Party. “They were already divided,” he said.

Nour Party Vice President Sayed Mostafa said no member of the party’s supreme committee expressed his wish to replace Abdel Ghafour.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm
 

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The deputy head of the Salafi Dawah movement strongly criticized the chairman of the Salafi Nour Party, Emad Abdel Ghafour, for attending the Turkish Embassy’s celebration of the 89th anniversary of the foundation of the Turkish republic Wednesday.

“We are not pleased with that participation and were not informed about it in advance,” said Sheikh Yasser Borhamy, the Salafi Dawah leader, answering questions from visitors of his website, salafvoice.com.

“A Muslim should not partake in a celebration marking the end of the Islamic Caliphate, which was the symbol of the nation’s unity and was brought down by enemies of Islam,” the sheikh said.

He decried the founding of the secular country.

“The founding of the secularist Ataturk republic that had fought against Islam stronger than infidels [did] was one of the major catastrophes. Marking the event is unjustifiable, even as a diplomatic custom,” Borhamy maintained.

Turkey has sought closer relations with Egypt following the ouster of former President Hosni Mubarak in the 25 January revolution last year.

President Mohamed Morsy visited Turkey in September. Ankara later approved a US$1 billion loan to Cairo.

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The supreme body of the Salafi-oriented Nour Party has decided to reappoint Emad Abdel Ghafour as party president until Thursday, when a new president and supreme body are elected.

The board of trustees had met with all sides in the party’s ongoing dispute, including Abdel Ghafour’s supporters and the supreme body, and was able bring the two sides towards a reconciliation. The supreme body released a statement late Friday renewing confidence in Abdel Ghafour and announcing that the party’s problems had been solved.

The supreme body of the Nour Party had announced on 26 September the dismissal of Emad Abdel Ghafour from his post as the party’s head. But a faction supporting Abdel Ghafour insisted that he was still president, as party rules do not allow the dismissal of the party's head unless through a general assembly meeting.

The crisis roots back to a dispute over the internal elections of the party, which led Abdel Ghafour to cancel them. The central election committee, however, decided to go on with the elections according to the supreme body’s instructions. 

Mostafa Khalifa, who was named president following Abdel Ghafour’s dismissal, will temporarily relinquish his post until the meeting holds its general assembly meeting. 

According to a statement issued by Nour Party spokesperson Nader Bakkar through Twitter, all parties agreed to go on with the party's internal elections according to the previously set schedule. It was also agreed that the wise men committee will consider all complaints submitted concerning the elections.

Bakkar added that he still does his job, set by the party’s supreme body, as spokesperson of the Nour party. The other spokespeople from the party are Yosri Hammad and Mohamed Nour; Bakkar had briefly been sacked from the position during the crisis.

The resolution comes before a scheduled meeting of the affairs committee on the disputeIt should be noted that the Nour Party crisis has ended just hours before the meeting of the Political Parties Affairs Committee to decide whether the party would be frozen.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The new supreme body of the Salafi Nour Party on Thursday renewed confidence in the party’s president, Emad Abdel Ghafour, in response to the former supreme body’s vote of no-confidence.

Abdel Ghafour’s deputy Mostafa Khalifa had been named as his successor.

The body on Wednesday decided to include 27 new members, and refer to investigation 12 members who had withdrawn their confidence in Abdel Ghafour.

It also decided to postpone the party branch elections scheduled for Friday in nine governorates.

The Nour Party is the second largest Islamist party in Egypt, and the main party representing the Salafis. Its former supreme body withdrew confidence from Abdel Ghafour when he insisted on restructuring the membership committee before holding the elections in the governorates.

Abdel Ghafour said that the new supreme body will manage the party from Cairo and not Alexandria, and that most party members were against the withdrawal of confidence.

However, Secretary General Galal al-Morra and Ahmed Abdel Hamid, spokesperson for the party’s elections committee, said Abdel Ghafour has no authority and cannot make decisions since the supreme body withdrew confidence from him.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Disputes in the Salafi Nour Party materialized in the forms of dismissals and suspensions of members, after the party’s top decision making body dismissed the party’s president, Emad Abdel Ghafour, who replied by dismissing two top members of the party.

After a statement the party’s supreme body released announced the dismissal of Abdel Ghafour, he responded by dismissing Ashraf Thabet, the head of membership affairs in the party, and spokesperson Nader Bakkar, Abdel Ghafour said in a tweet. He characterized the dismissals as being for the sake of “cleansing.”

Disagreements have erupted in the recent months after internal elections, which members said were marred by violations, were stopped by Abdel Ghafour.

The supreme body decided after its meeting on Tuesday to appoint Mustafa Hussein Khalifa as Abdel Ghafour’s successor until the general assembly of the party is held to elect a new supreme body and president.

In a statement, the supreme body of the party attributed the dismissal to the fact that Abdel Ghafour is an assistant to the president of the republic.

President Mohamed Morsy had chosen Abdel Ghafour last month to be his adviser for outreach.

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The announcement of the formation of President Mohamed Morsy's presidential team on Monday has stirred controversy, with opponents saying it totally excluded the opposition and is dominated by Islamists.

Opponents referred to Morsy’s promise to appoint a woman and a Copt as deputies if he were elected president during a news conference on 29 May.

Activist George Isaac told state-run newspaper Al-Ahram on Monday that the opposition has been bypassed in the formation of the presidential team. He said it was important to have a representative of the opposition to reflect its opinions on various issues.

Ayman Nour, leader of the Ghad al-Thawra Party, shared the same feeling, telling Al-Masry Al-Youm that half of the presidential team is from the Brotherhood and the Salafis, who are joined by some technocrats — but no liberals.

Observers believe Islamists, either independent or affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafi Nour Party, seized nearly two thirds of posts on the presidential team.

Reviewing the resumes of the assistants and advisers reveals that 14 out of the 21 names declared have Islamist sympathies.

The team members, which were announced on Monday, consist of four assistants and 17 advisers and represent various Islamist factions as well as independent figures.

The four assistants include:

—    Pakinam Sharqawi, a political science professor, who will act as the presidential assistant for political affairs.

—    Samir Morkos, a Coptic writer, who will act as the presidential assistant for democratization.

—    Essam al-Haddad, a prominent Muslim Brotherhood member, who will serve as the presidential assistant for foreign affairs and international cooperation.

—    Emad Abdel Ghafour, the leader of the Salafi-oriented Nour Party, as the presidential assistant for national dialogue.

The team also includes 17 advisers of various public figures including media host Amr El Leithy, secular journalist Ayman al-Sayad and nationalist writer Sekina Fouad.

This means that the team includes three members of the Muslim Brotherhood's Guidance Bureau: Essam al-Erian, acting chairman of the group's Freedom and Justice Party, and Mohie Hamed, a member at the group's office on Sharqiya, along with Haddad.

It also includes Coptic writer and activist Rafik Habib, the only Copt that holds a senior position in the FJP, as well as Omaima Kamel, the party's women secretary

Salafis are represented in the formation by Abdel Ghafour, Bassam al-Zarqa, the party's secretary, and Khaled Alam Eddin, a marine science professor who had refused the post of Environment Minister in the current cabinet.

There are also two Islamist-leaning academics: Pakinam Sharqawi, a political science professor, who will act as the presidential assistant for political affairs, and Seif Abdel Fattah, professor of Islamic political thought.

Islamic thinker and former presidential candidate Mohamed Selim al-Awa was also named in the presidential team, in addition to Ahmed Omran and Ayman Ali, both known for their Islamist orientations.

Islamist domination was not the only problem for critics, who also expressed concerns over the large number of advisers and the obscurity of their powers.

Some say that a number of independents selected for the presidential team do not possess a considerable experience in public work, citing Mohamed Essmat Seif al-Dawla as an example.

The vagueness about the exact role and structure of the presidential team also raises concerns about how genuinely the new president is interested in taking advice from a team of aides and consultants outside the scope of the Brotherhood.

Sharqawi told DPA that “the coming days will bring more clarity as of the distribution of roles of each member of the team.” She added that those roles would be set out in detail after Morsy returns from his China trip

Asked to what degree the new presidential team is able to address problems remaining since the Mubarak era, Sharqawi said, “It is a heavy legacy; we are here talking about a manifold state body where corruption had been legalized, and our mission would be to motivate its workers to build a modern democratic state.”

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Salafi Nour Party MPs and scholars started holding seminars Wednesday evening in North Sinai governorate for four days in an effort to combat "Takfiri" ideology, which authorities say is behind the violent incidents the governorate has recently witnessed.

Followers of the"Takfiri" ideology generally condone violence as a way to achieve political goals and condemn other Muslims who do not share their strict interpretation of Islam.

State-run news agency MENA said that the meetings and discussions aim to explaining the true teachings of Islam. The Salafi delegation mainly represents the Nour Party’s Shura Council bloc.

The first meeting was held last night at Abu Bakr al-Seddeq Mosque in the Fawakhria neighborhood of Arish. Sheikh Yasser al-Borhamy, the deputy leader of the Salafi Dawah, and Abdel Moneim al-Shahat, the group's spokesperson, were among the attendees, along with tribal chiefs and local citizens.

MENA quoted members of the delegation as saying that the group would visit several parts of the governorate and the border areas, as well as meeting with security leadership. They will call on North Sinai residents to support military operations targeting extremism in the area.

Since the January 2011 uprising that toppled former President Hosni Mubarak, observers have warned of the increasing presence of Islamist extremists in Sinai.

An attack on an army checkpoint in the city of Rafah earlier this month, which killed 16 Egyptian soldiers, was blamed on Islamist militant groups. One week after the attack, Nour Party leader Emad Abdel Ghafour said his party was willing to combat extremist ideology in the area.

The Muslim Brotherhood had announced a similar initiative on Thursday, unveiling plans to communicate with Sinai tribesmen the importance of combating Takfiri ideology throughout the region.

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