Archive for Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa

President Mohamed Morsy reiterated through his spokesperson Egypt’s respect for international obligations and the treaties it has signed.

Morsy’s statement came in response to calls for the amendment of the Camp David Accords with Israel, presidential spokesperson Yasser Ali said Tuesday evening.

An attack on an Egyptian military checkpoint in Rafah, North Sinai on Sunday night left 16 soldiers dead and seven others wounded. Some of the assailants, whose identities are still unknown, drove an armored vehicle over the border into Israel, where they were killed by the Israeli military.

Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa was among many public figures who asked Morsy to amend the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel so that Egyptian troops could operate in greater numbers in the Sinai Peninsula.

The Muslim Brotherhood held Israeli intelligence agency Mossad responsible for Sunday’s attack, saying on its website that Mossad has wanted to abort the Egyptian revolution from the beginning.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm
 

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Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa has once again rejected the idea of ​​forming an unelected presidential council.

“It threatens the democratic process and the stability of the country," the unsuccessful presidential candidate said of the idea on his Facebook page Sunday, stressing that the presidential runoff scheduled for 16 and 17 June should be held on time.

Calls have recently surfaced for the formation of a presidential council with Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Morsy as its head and losing candidates Hamdeen Sabbahi and Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh as deputies who cannot be dismissed and have their duties stated in the constitution.

Also included in the idea is that liberal leader Mohamed ElBaradei would form a national coalition government comprising all revolutionary forces and parties to face Ahmed Shafiq in his runoff contest against Morsy.

“The final say is from the ballots,” Moussa said. “They express the free will of the people."

He pointed out that the proposal for a presidential council was rejected before, as it would be illegitimate and only serve personal interests.

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Muslim Brotherhood presidential candidate Mohamed Morsy leads the presidential race so far among Egyptians in Saudi Arabia, Egyptian Ambassador in Riyadh Mahmoud Ouf said Monday.

Morsy led with 49.5 percent of the 83,351 valid votes cast in the Riyadh constituency, the Egyptian Embassy in Riyadh announced Monday. The constituency includes the central, east and northeast parts of Saudi Arabia, state-run news agency MENA reported.

Presidential hopeful Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh, a former Muslim Brotherhood member, won 26.13 percent of the vote. Nasserist hopeful Hamdeen Sabbahi came in third with 11.4 percent.

Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa ranked fourth with 7.45 percent, while ex-Civil Aviation Minister Ahmed Shafiq followed with 4.24 percent. The two Mubarak-era ministers ranked as front-runners in local polls.

Out of an estimated 160,000 voters who registered to vote in Riyadh, 55 percent cast their votes, either by coming to the embassy in person or by sending their choices by mail.

On Sunday, Ali al-Esheiry, the Egyptian consul-general in Jeddah, announced the voting results from Jeddah constituency, which includes west, northwest and south Saudi Arabia. He said 48 percent of about 56,000 votes went to Morsy.

Abouel Fotouh came in second with 28 percent, while Sabbahi came in third with 6,029 votes and Moussa followed with 4,504 votes. The other candidates in the race received less than 2,000 votes.

Morsy previously won 30.9 percent of the vote for Egyptians in Kuwait, followed by Abouel Fotouh with almost a quarter of the votes, the Egyptian ambassador to Kuwait announced Sunday.

Meanwhile, Abouel Fotouh leads the race in the US constituencies of Washington, Houston and Chicago, while Shafiq won the highest number of votes in New York and Los Angeles.

Polling stations set up overseas were scheduled to begin vote counting after voting ended for Egyptians abroad at 8 pm on 17 May, according to rules set by the Presidential Elections Commission.

The results are set to be announced when the vote-counting process ends. Voting in Egypt will open Wednesday and Thursday.

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Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa remains on top of candidates for the presidential election to be held on 23 and 24 May, according to an opinion poll by a prominent think tank.

According to the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies survey, Moussa still tops the chart with the support of 40.8 percent of poll participants, but he is followed this time by former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq, who climbed to 19.9 percent.

Former Muslim Brotherhood member Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh fell back to third, with 17.8 percent.

Brotherhood nominee Mohamed Morsy remained fourth with 9.4 percent, followed by leftist Hamdeen Sabbahi with 7 percent.

Egyptians are due to vote on 23 and 24 May in the first round of the election, which is expected to go to a June runoff between the top two out of the 13 candidates. Regional observers are watching the election as a measure of the change brought by last year’s historic uprisings.

Moussa, 75, is a veteran diplomat who once served as Mubarak’s foreign minister. He has intensified his electoral campaign in Upper Egypt and the Delta, visiting towns and villages while painting himself as the only candidate with the stature and experience to lead Egypt.

Commenting on the results, three Al-Ahram center experts said competition is obviously heating up, and added that candidates’ campaigners are now applying their energy in full in a bid to sway voters.

Over the last three polls conducted by the center, Moussa has managed to maintain a support rate of around 40 percent, the recent poll revealed.

Shafiq, who served as prime minister under Hosni Mubarak, meanwhile, gained eight additional points in the same period, moving forward to second. Abouel Fotouh lost nine points, falling down to third. Morsy won nearly six points to keep his fourth post which he occupied since Al-Ahram center’s sixth poll.

Sabbahi also remained fifth for several consecutive weeks, enjoying an almost-stable support rate of 7 percent. Islamic intellectual and lawyer Mohamed Selim al-Awa also kept his sixth ranking for several weeks despite losing three points over the last three polls.

None of the 13 candidates in the first post-Mubarak presidential race is expected to win outright, setting the stage for a second round of voting in June, although Moussa and his Islamist rivals are viewed as front-runners.

The progress made by both Shafiq and Morsy over the last three polls came, therefore, at the expense of Abouel Fotouh and Awa, the poll said.

It illustrated that the recent indicators reflect a change in the public mood away from the Islamist nominees, which will benefit liberal and reformist runners.

The same poll said the rate of voters who remain undecided on whom they will support does not surpass 15.3 percent, thus echoing voters’ increasing hesitation as presidential campaigns grow fiercer.

Despite the slight increase in the number of those who say they will not vote in the elections, the number of those who said they would participate exceeds 95 percent.

That rate, however, is not expected to materialize on the ground, and the actual participation rate will rather be much less, which will serve earnest and organized groups, and nominees such as Abouel Fotouh and Morsy, according to the poll.

The poll said that if the recent indicators continue until the elections, a runoff can be expected between the two runners with the most votes.

It stressed that liberal candidates have better chances in the runoffs compared to Islamist contenders, adding that Moussa, in that respect, would enjoy the strongest prospects of success, given the wide gap that would exist between him and his liberal rivals in the runoffs.

If the runoffs are held for the top Islamist candidates, Abouel Fotouh and Morsy, Abouel Fotouh would have better chances, the poll says.

The center carried out its poll between 5 to 8 May, personally interviewing 1,200 participants who represent all Egyptian governorates. Participants were selected with the assistance of the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics.

The center estimated the margin of error at about 3 percent.

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QANTARA, Egypt — Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa campaigned for the votes of influential tribes on Sunday in his battle for Egypt's presidency against well-organized Islamists, who are his main rivals in this month's election.

Pledging to create a new economic zone along the Suez Canal and invest in neighboring Sinai, where Bedouin tribes have long complained of neglect, Moussa was hailed by tribal leaders who claim followers stretching along Egypt's eastern seaboard.

In traditional fashion, the 300 or more people who listened to Moussa's lunchtime speech in Qantara, on the west banks of the canal, were treated to huge trays of rice with slabs of meat on top served by a troop of waiters under colorful awnings.

Voting starts 23 to 24 May in the election to choose a new president after Hosni Mubarak was turfed out of office last year. None of the 13 candidates is expected to win outright, setting the stage for a second round vote in June, although Moussa and his Islamist rivals are viewed as front-runners.

"We swear an oath of allegiance to Amr Moussa, the [next] president of the Republic of Egypt, because of his broad political experience," Farag al-Muteir, a Swarka tribal leader in flowing robes and headdress, told the gathering.

The Swarka tribe hosted the event and at least two more senior members of other tribes stood up to pledge their support.

The backing of a tribe or notable can tip the balance in favor of a candidate locally in parliamentary elections and although tribal votes have far less impact in a presidential race on the national stage, they may still prove valuable as Moussa battles with two Islamist networks who back his rivals.

The Muslim Brotherhood is fielding Mohamed Morsy and hardline Salafi Islamists said last month they would back Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh. As proof of their formidable voting machine, the Brotherhood and Salafis swept parliamentary polls.

"All votes are important," Moussa told Reuters on his campaign bus when asked about his bid for tribal support. "This is a big bloc of votes and big bloc of people. I myself have [long] relations with them."

Loyalties

Moussa said Egyptians with tribal loyalties numbered some 12 million in the nation of 80 million people. There are no precise figures and analysts point out that, even if the number is that high, many voters who hail from tribes will make their own choice rather than blindly follow their leaders.

But 75-year-old Moussa, who has been campaigning for months, far longer than most other candidates, has trekked up and down the country, including heading into the Sinai desert and southern Egypt where tribes and big families still have clout.

Some are following their elders' lead.

"There are two reasons I chose [Moussa]. The sheikh said so and we found Moussa has a clear vision," said Sayed Abdel Karim, 45, one of the Swarka, reflecting a view common among those who turned up.

But others remained undecided. Ibrahim Youssef, 30, said he would not back an Islamist but is deliberating whether to pick Moussa or Mubarak's last prime minister Ahmed Shafiq, who is running and who like Mubarak was a former air force commander.

Moussa served as Mubarak's foreign minister through the 1990s before moving to the Arab League, but he has brushed off charges that he is part of the old order, often leveled against him by Islamist opponents. He has highlighted differences he had with Mubarak on regional and other policies.

Well-known

Moussa, well-known abroad from his Arab League role, has sought to paint himself as the only candidate with the stature and experience to lead Egypt after 15 months of political turmoil and economic upheaval. In a newspaper interview, he said Egypt needed a statesman not a man of religion at the helm.

Asked about this statement during Sunday's campaigning, he said Egypt didn't need a president who would answer to a higher religious leader "like Iran" where the elected president answers to a supreme leader, who is not picked by a popular vote.

Both Islamist candidates dismiss such a characterization.

Moussa said he believes he could secure the more than 50 percent of the vote needed to give him an outright win in the first round. That would avoid a runoff where, if he was one of the top two, his rival would almost certainly be an Islamist with the Islamist vote united against Moussa.

But a first-round victory would be a challenge. During Moussa's campaign tour on Sunday — sporting posters of a beaming Moussa and his campaign slogan "We're up for the challenge" — the Brotherhood's well-organized support was also on display.

On the highway where Moussa's bus drove, a row of 17 people stood by the road at intervals holding up Morsy posters.

Next to one of Sunday's campaign venues, in the village of Bayadiya, a Brotherhood supporter insisted Egypt needed a religious man in charge, like Morsy, and described Moussa as one of the "feloul" — an Arabic word meaning "remnants" of Mubarak's era. He was quickly silenced by Moussa supporters nearby.

Although polls have put Moussa ahead, helped by his broad name recognition, predicting an outcome is difficult in a nation that will be holding its first free vote for a president in its history after the rigged elections of Mubarak's era.

Yet some votes are shifting Moussa's way. Some of the floating voters who picked Brotherhood members for Parliament are already fed up with how they have performed.

Mahmoud Mohamed, 45, said he would back Moussa after voting for the Brotherhood in the parliamentary race.

"I thought they [the Brotherhood] would change the ways of the old party but it turned out they are acting the same," he said, referring to the former ruling National Democratic Party.

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QANTARA, Egypt — Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa campaigned for the votes of influential tribes on Sunday in his battle for Egypt's presidency against well-organized Islamists, who are his main rivals in this month's election.

Pledging to create a new economic zone along the Suez Canal and invest in neighboring Sinai, where Bedouin tribes have long complained of neglect, Moussa was hailed by tribal leaders who claim followers stretching along Egypt's eastern seaboard.

In traditional fashion, the 300 or more people who listened to Moussa's lunchtime speech in Qantara, on the west banks of the canal, were treated to huge trays of rice with slabs of meat on top served by a troop of waiters under colorful awnings.

Voting starts 23 to 24 May in the election to choose a new president after Hosni Mubarak was turfed out of office last year. None of the 13 candidates is expected to win outright, setting the stage for a second round vote in June, although Moussa and his Islamist rivals are viewed as front-runners.

"We swear an oath of allegiance to Amr Moussa, the [next] president of the Republic of Egypt, because of his broad political experience," Farag al-Muteir, a Swarka tribal leader in flowing robes and headdress, told the gathering.

The Swarka tribe hosted the event and at least two more senior members of other tribes stood up to pledge their support.

The backing of a tribe or notable can tip the balance in favor of a candidate locally in parliamentary elections and although tribal votes have far less impact in a presidential race on the national stage, they may still prove valuable as Moussa battles with two Islamist networks who back his rivals.

The Muslim Brotherhood is fielding Mohamed Morsy and hardline Salafi Islamists said last month they would back Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh. As proof of their formidable voting machine, the Brotherhood and Salafis swept parliamentary polls.

"All votes are important," Moussa told Reuters on his campaign bus when asked about his bid for tribal support. "This is a big bloc of votes and big bloc of people. I myself have [long] relations with them."

Loyalties

Moussa said Egyptians with tribal loyalties numbered some 12 million in the nation of 80 million people. There are no precise figures and analysts point out that, even if the number is that high, many voters who hail from tribes will make their own choice rather than blindly follow their leaders.

But 75-year-old Moussa, who has been campaigning for months, far longer than most other candidates, has trekked up and down the country, including heading into the Sinai desert and southern Egypt where tribes and big families still have clout.

Some are following their elders' lead.

"There are two reasons I chose [Moussa]. The sheikh said so and we found Moussa has a clear vision," said Sayed Abdel Karim, 45, one of the Swarka, reflecting a view common among those who turned up.

But others remained undecided. Ibrahim Youssef, 30, said he would not back an Islamist but is deliberating whether to pick Moussa or Mubarak's last prime minister Ahmed Shafiq, who is running and who like Mubarak was a former air force commander.

Moussa served as Mubarak's foreign minister through the 1990s before moving to the Arab League, but he has brushed off charges that he is part of the old order, often leveled against him by Islamist opponents. He has highlighted differences he had with Mubarak on regional and other policies.

Well-known

Moussa, well-known abroad from his Arab League role, has sought to paint himself as the only candidate with the stature and experience to lead Egypt after 15 months of political turmoil and economic upheaval. In a newspaper interview, he said Egypt needed a statesman not a man of religion at the helm.

Asked about this statement during Sunday's campaigning, he said Egypt didn't need a president who would answer to a higher religious leader "like Iran" where the elected president answers to a supreme leader, who is not picked by a popular vote.

Both Islamist candidates dismiss such a characterization.

Moussa said he believes he could secure the more than 50 percent of the vote needed to give him an outright win in the first round. That would avoid a runoff where, if he was one of the top two, his rival would almost certainly be an Islamist with the Islamist vote united against Moussa.

But a first-round victory would be a challenge. During Moussa's campaign tour on Sunday — sporting posters of a beaming Moussa and his campaign slogan "We're up for the challenge" — the Brotherhood's well-organized support was also on display.

On the highway where Moussa's bus drove, a row of 17 people stood by the road at intervals holding up Morsy posters.

Next to one of Sunday's campaign venues, in the village of Bayadiya, a Brotherhood supporter insisted Egypt needed a religious man in charge, like Morsy, and described Moussa as one of the "feloul" — an Arabic word meaning "remnants" of Mubarak's era. He was quickly silenced by Moussa supporters nearby.

Although polls have put Moussa ahead, helped by his broad name recognition, predicting an outcome is difficult in a nation that will be holding its first free vote for a president in its history after the rigged elections of Mubarak's era.

Yet some votes are shifting Moussa's way. Some of the floating voters who picked Brotherhood members for Parliament are already fed up with how they have performed.

Mahmoud Mohamed, 45, said he would back Moussa after voting for the Brotherhood in the parliamentary race.

"I thought they [the Brotherhood] would change the ways of the old party but it turned out they are acting the same," he said, referring to the former ruling National Democratic Party.

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A politician expelled from the Muslim Brotherhood is finding support among liberals and Islamists alike in his bid for Egypt's presidency, challenging the group he helped lead with a message that spans divisions in a polarized society.

Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh is appealing to a broader constituency than many of the candidates in a field that includes a Brotherhood leader and former members of the Hosni Mubarak administration. Whether he can win the historic democratic election will depend on how deeply that support runs.

His chances were improved by the disqualification of leading Islamists including the Brotherhood's first-choice candidate and an ultra-orthodox Salafi preacher who were both contenders.

Egyptians go to the polls in May to decide who will replace Mubarak – toppled last year after decades of repressive rule – as head of the Arab world's most populous state.

The vote is expected to go to a June run-off between the top two candidates. Former Arab League chief Amr Moussa is seen as another of the front-runners.

Though Abouel Fotouh was ejected from the Brotherhood last year – he defied its wishes with his presidential bid – analysts believe he still commands broad respect in a group that he helped lead for several decades. Since parting ways with the Brotherhood, his appeal has gone well beyond the Islamist camp.

His commitment to political reform has impressed secular-minded Egyptians. Some of Mohamed ElBaradei's backers have rallied to his side after the reformist liberal quit the race.

Beyond the elite, a reputation for honesty and consistency is helping Abouel Fotouh build a following among the population at large.

"What he says, he does," said Amr el-Shobaki, an independent member of the Egyptian parliament, extolling Abouel Fotouh's virtues as he introduced him at a rally in a working class district of Cairo on a Thursday evening in April.

Abouel Fotouh, he said, was the right man to "break the polarization" of a country where rifts have deepened between Islamists who dominated parliamentary elections and others for whom the rise of the Brotherhood is a cause of deep concern.

Abouel Fotouh, a 60-year old doctor, loosened his tie as he stood to address the crowd of several hundred people. They listened quietly as he outlined a vision that would make Egypt a G20 economy in 10 years, strengthen its army and eradicate remnants of the autocratic old order whom he described as a major threat.

"After the January  25 revolution, God willing, the Egyptian people will no longer dream simply of their rights. They will dream of something more than that," he said.

Egypt, he said, must be run by a civilian state that respects Islamic law in a moderate form, "far removed from secular, Islamic or religious extremism". "Egypt will not be a copy of Turkey, or Tunisia, or Iran," he said, listing states governed in full or part by Islamists. "Egypt will be Egypt."

Undecided voters

"He is a respectable person and a moderate. The Egyptian people need this idea at this time," said Murad Fakhri, one of a group of ultra-orthodox Salafi Muslims who were watching Abouel Fotouh speak. Khaled Badr, another Salafi in the crowd, said he had planned to vote for Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, the disqualified preacher, but would now vote for Abouel Fotouh instead.

While opinion polls have shown Abouel Fotouh trailing candidates including Moussa and Abu Ismail, many voters have yet to make up their minds. Abu Ismail's elimination leaves his Islamist supporters with the choice of Abouel Fotouh and Mohamed Morsy, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate who has described himself as the only Islamist in the field.

Mahmoud Hussein, the group's secretary-general, was dismissive of Abouel Fotouh's chances, saying that while many liberals were still concerned about his Brotherhood past, many Islamists had started to doubt he was a true Islamist. "He will get some votes from here, and some from there," he told Reuters.

Yet Abouel Fotouh's past is inextricably linked to the Islamist group banned under Mubarak. He was part of a reformist wing that Brotherhood watchers say has been marginalized by the more conservative elements which now run the group.

His Islamic activism evolved on campus. He is famous for publicly confronting President Anwar Sadat in the 1970s, telling him he was surrounded by hypocrites. A recording of the heated debate has been posted on an Abouel Fotouh campaign web site.

Sadat jailed Abouel Fotouh along with hundreds of other dissidents in 1981. In a new book, Abouel Fotouh recalls finding himself in prison alongside the likes of Ayman al-Zawahiri, now the leader of al Qaeda, and other more radical elements rounded up after Sadat was assassinated by Islamist gunmen that year.

Abouel Fotouh's confrontation with Sadat is cited by his new supporters as one source of admiration. While Abouel Fotouh is gaining from a perception that he is a man of principle, the Brotherhood is struggling against claims that it has grown power hungry – something fiercely denied by the group.

"The very cool thing about Abouel Fotouh is that once you hear about him, you are sold," said Waleed Abd el-Rahman, a 27-year old business development manager who like most Egyptians was not involved in politics during the Mubarak era.

"All the things he talks about are very inclusive. You wouldn't feel left out by him whether you were an Islamist, a liberal, a Christian or even if you don't believe in God."

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