Archive for Hazem Salah Abu Ismail

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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Egyptian Islamic Jihad is considering joining the emerging electoral coalition led by ultraconservative Salafi cleric Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, according to one of the organization's leaders.

Osama al-Qasem of Islamic Jihad said that the talks also include Jama'a al-Islamiya's political arm, the Construction and Development Party, who will contest in the upcoming parliamentary elections mandated by the new Constitution.

Al-Qasem said that negotiations are ongoing, but that Islamic Jihad is likely to field candidates on a shared electoral list with disqualified presidential candidate Abu Ismail's coalition, since it is expected to form the largest Islamic bloc in the elections. 

Qasem told Al-Masry Al-Youm he hopes the Construction and Development Party and other Islamist political forces including the Muslim Brotherhood will join the coalition to "form a whole Islamic alliance."

Another leader of the organization admitted that the Brotherhood is not interested in joining forces with Islamic Jihad and other ultraconservative Islamist groups "because Jihad and its thoughts do not reflect them, as they cannot tolerate the name of jihad on their lists."

Ali Farag said that Islamic Jihad would likely cooperate with Abu Ismail, who he called "the black horse in the next parliamentary season."

He said that Islamic Jihad will play to win by choosing the side most likely to gain more votes, but noted that Jama'a al-Islamiya is a logical partner for his group given their shared ideology and history. 

Farag said that his group will nominate 'historical' leading candidates including Mostafa al-Desouki, Ahmed Saleh Jahin, Osama al-Qasem, Ahmed Yousef and Abbas Shelen, in addition to a large number of group leaders in most of the Upper Egypt governorates.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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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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Four supporters of former Salafi presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail were accused by police of attacking the headquarters of the liberal Wafd Party, Al-Masry Al-Youm reported on Tuesday.

The paper quoted police sources as saying that the four suspects also managed to detain Kamal al-Daly, the head of Criminal Investigations Department in Giza, during the Saturday attack, which saw dozens of Abu Ismail's supporters, who call themselves "Hazemoun," attacking the building with birdshot and Molotov cocktails.

Daly allegedly told his aides that the four Abu Ismail supporters put a knife on his neck and told him to ask the police forces not to advance and chase them. Al-Masry Al-Youm tried to contact Daly to verify the story but could not reach him.

The four suspects were accused of attacking the Wafd Party's headquarters, attempting to murder eight people, including four policemen, and smashing 15 cars.

Abu Ismail himself has denied any links to the attacks against the Wafd Party's headquarters.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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An eyewitness has contradicted Al-Shorouk's account of Hazemoun supporters attacking the Borsa cafes Sunday, saying that the movement had nothing to do with the disturbances there.

Aman Singh, a resident of Cairo and US national who was present at one of the cafes during the incident, denied that supporters of Hazem Salah Abu Ismail attacked cafe patrons.

He told Egypt Independent that "there really was not any indication that there were any Hazemoun or Salafis involved or that there was any political or religious aspect to the fight."

Shorouk had quoted an eyewitness as saying that Hazemoun members were accompanied by members of the "Ahrar" movement, a self-styled vigilante youth group enforcing public virtue to attack the café.

The eyewitnesses told the paper that a number of people were injured in the attack, including political activitsts known to frequent the cafes. Witnesses added that Hazemon and Ahrar members fired birdshot and launched fireworks during the attack.

While lighting off fireworks, members of the movements also chanted "Sharia is a lifestyle," according to eyewitnesses.

But Singh denied such allegations as baseless.

"No one yelled anything related to Sharia or anything religious/political that I could hear," he said.

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Monday’s papers indicate that the controversial results of the referendum on the draft constitution have widened the gap between Egypt’s political forces, as opposition and human rights activists claimed that Saturday’s poll is “invalid.”

According to both state-owned and independent papers, the “yes” vote had a slight lead over the “no” side after 57 percent of voters, surprisingly, approved the draft constitution, with a second round of voting still to come.

Privately owned daily Al-Tahrir leads with a headline: “The scandals of Morsy’s referendum.” The paper states that seven rights organizations released a statement Sunday demanding that the first phase of the referendum be nullified due to the alleged irregularities that occurred during the voting process.

The statement reportedly listed a number of violations including the absence of judicial supervision, inciting violence against “yes” voters, the impersonation of judges, Copts being prevented from entering some of the polling stations and the distribution of unstamped ballots.

Independent daily Al-Shorouk writes that the National Salvation Front has echoed the statement, demanding full investigations into violations committed during polls and calling for a million-man protest on Tuesday against serious fraud in the referendum.

While the high elections commission refuses to approve the preliminary results of the referendum until the second stage takes place next week, Freedom and Justice, mouthpiece of the Muslim Brotherhood’s political arm, opts for its usual victorious language, describing the referendum in a headline as a substantial move towards democracy.

The partisan paper dedicates its seventh page to accusing the National Salvation Front and independent satellite channels, including CBC, Dream, and Al-Hayat, of provoking new crises to hinder the enactment of the constitution and tarnish the images of supporters of both the Brotherhood and former Salafi presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail.

In response to the NSF’s statement, Freedom and Justice claims on the same page that the opposition is “playing its last card” in an effort to conceal its failure to mobilize citizens to vote against the draft constitution and accuses the group of organizing another conspiracy to bring chaos in the country, referring to incidences of arson at FJP offices.

On its front page, the liberal party paper Al-Wafd publishes pictures of Abu Ismail and his supporters, who allegedly took part in a fierce attack on its headquarters Saturday, burning the building’s facade and some cars in the surrounding area.

The report says that the public prosecutor is investigating the witnesses who say that more than 500 people stormed into the building carrying knives and Molotov cocktails.     

The paper raises the question of why President Mohamed Morsy is not taking a rigid stance against the “crime” of attacking the Wafd headquarters, asking, “Does silence means his acceptance?!”

Al-Sayed Al-Badawi, head of the Wafd Party, is quoted as saying in a press conference Sunday in the same paper that Al-Wafd’s journalists “are paying the cost of defending the country.” Badawi, however, assures they will not back away from their “patriotic” editorial policies.    

Independent daily Al-Sabah writes that Abu Ismail denied accusations that his ultra-conservative allies participated in breaking into the Wafd Party’s headquarters. He also described Badawi’s allegations as a manipulation meant to turn away people from the referendum.   

In his op-ed, Ibrahim Eissa, Al-Tarir’s editor-in-chief, assures that despite the Brotherhood’s narrow victory and its ongoing attempts to enact the constitution by carrying out different forms of electoral irregularities and through verbal and physical threats to anti-Morsy factions, the group “knows well that they can lie to themselves, but not to us.”

The vocal opposition writer believes that if rigged ballots were not included in the voting process and flagrant violations have not taken place, the “no” votes would have exceeded the “yes” ones.

He wraps up his article by pointing a finger at the Islamist president over the deepening rift between the different segments of society, saying, “Morsy succeeds in nothing but failure.”

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-Watan: Daily, privately owned

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

Youm7: Daily, privately owned

Al-Tahrir: Daily, privately owned

Al-Sabah: 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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A number of members of the Hazemoun movement attacked patrons at downtown Cairo cafes, including the well-known Borsa cafe, late Sunday.

The Hazemoun members, comprised of former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail's supporters, were accompanied by members of the "Ahrar" movement, a self-styled vigilante youth group enforcing public virtue, according to eyewitnesses.

Al-Shorouk newspaper quoted eyewitnesses as saying that a number of people were injured in the attack, including political activitsts known to frequent the cafes. Witnesses added that Hazemon and Ahrar members fired birdshot and launched fireworks during the attack.

While lighting off fireworks, members of the movements also chanted "Sharia is a lifestyle," according to eyewitnesses.

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Salafi leader Hazem Salah Abu Ismail has called on his supporters to cancel a planned march on Dokki police station at 7 pm, in an apparent attempt to defuse a confrontation between his supporters and police that had led officers to form a massive phalanx in front of the station by the early afternoon.

 

News reports on Saturday indicated that supporters of Abu Ismail, also known as the Hazemoun, had attacked the liberal Wafd Party headquarters in Dokki. Police had fired into the air to disperse protesters before gathering in front of the headquarters. Afterward, Wafd chief Al-Sayed al-Badawy blamed the Hazemoun movement for the attack.

The Interior Ministry said Sunday it was pursuing those who behind the attack, but not Abu Ismail.

In a statement, the ministry said it has tracked down the attackers and found them near Abu Ismail’s office in Dokki, and denied rumors that it was targeting him personally.

The Hazemoun had gathered in front of Assad Ibn al-Furat Mosque by late afternoon Sunday. They are reportedly preparing to march on the Dokki police station to protest what Abu Ismail has called “old police practices.”

In an Facebook post before calling on his supporters to cancel the march, Abu Ismail had written; “Today at 7 pm, we’ll head to the Dokki police station to know what happened,” referring to his belief at the time that the Interior Ministry had identified him and his supporters as the perpetrators behind the attacks.

Abu Ismail has denied that he incited the attack in several phone calls to television shows, and threatened to sue whoever tied his name to the incident.

Abu Ismail had emerged as one of the frontrunners for the first presidential vote since the fall of Hosni Mubarak, but the high elections commission barred him from running after it learned that his late mother had a US passport, a status that disqualified him from the race.

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Fouad Badrawy, secretary of the Wafd Party, filed a police report on Sunday accusing former presidential hopeful Hazem Salah Abu Ismail of inciting his supporters to break into the party headquarters, assaulting police and party employees, ransacking offices, and lighting it on fire.

Wafd said on Saturday that some members of the Hazemoun movement, supporters of Salafi Sheikh Abu Ismail, attacked the party headquarters using live ammunition, birdshot and sticks. The assailants smashed vehicles belonging to party members and employees of its newspaper in addition to setting the building on fire, the party said.  

Abu Ismail denied Badrawy accusations during phone calls with several television programs, threatening to sue anyone who connects his name with the incidents.

A reporter for privately-owned daily Al-Watan, Hussein Ahmed Hussein, filed a similar complaint against Abu Ismail for inciting supporters to attack him while he was covering their protest on Saturday in Lebanon Square, Mohandiseen.

Abu Ismail’s supporters were demonstrating against opposition protesters trapping Sheikh Ahmed al-Mahalawy inside Al-Qaed Ibrahim Mosque in Alexandria Friday after he had called on people to approve the constitution draft in the referendum on Saturday.  

Edited translation from MENA

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