Archive for the Brotherhood

President Mohamed Morsy’s foreign affairs assistant Essam al-Haddad and the president’s secretary Khaled al-Qazzaz traveled Wednesday to Abu Dhabi for a two-day visit with local officials. 

The pair will discuss the circumstances surrounding the recent arrest of 10 Egyptians in the United Arab Emirates, as well as strengthening bilateral relations, informed sources at Cairo airport told German DPA news agency. 

Authorities arrested an Egyptian cell affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood that allegedly sought to draft Egyptians for a plot against the ruling Emirati regime, according to UAE news reports Tuesday. The Brotherhood has denied the allegations.

Edited translation from DPA

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Authorities in the United Arab Emirates have arrested ten members of a local Muslim Brotherhood cell, according to local news reports.

Local Emirati newspaper Al-Khaleej quoted a security source as saying that investigations revealed the group runs a cell in the UAE.  However, Brotherhood spokesperson Mahmoud Ghozlan denounced the reports, saying that they "aim to provoke confusion about the Muslim Brotherhood" in remarks to the state-run Al-Ahram news portal Tuesday.

Ghozlan added that the group doesn't interfere in other countries' affairs and strives to maintain good relations between Egypt and the UAE, and said that the Brotherhood would respond to the claims with evidence to the contrary.

He also declined to comment on any links between the arrests and recent comments by Dubai police chief Dahi Khalfan slamming the Brotherhood, but claimed that Khalfan might have ordered the arrests out of enmity towards the group.

Khalfan has repeatedly attacked the Brotherhood in media comments, and earlier this month a Brotherhood member accused Khalfan and the UAE's ambassador to Egypt of plotting to assassinate the group's leaders.

Al-Khaleej reported that group members had been meeting secretly throughout the Gulf country and also claimed that the cell had created companies acting as fronts to transfer funds to the main chapter in Egypt.

The newspaper further claimed that investigations showed the cell was collecting classified defense-related information about the UAE, and had held workshops for members about overthrowing ruling Arab regimes. The newspaper's source also said that more suspects could be arrested soon.

Other news reports Sunday said several Egyptians in the UAE had been arrested, but without any specific accusations.

The UAE has been wary of revolts in neighboring Arab states that have overthrown several autocratic leaders, and the subsequent rise of Islamist governments in those countries.

 

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The Muslim Brotherhood does not know who is campaigning on the Internet to nominate the group's deputy supreme guide, Khairat al-Shater, for prime minister, the Brotherhood's secretary general said, denying that it could be the group's youth.

"It is up to the president to decide on this," Mahmoud Hussein told Al-Masry Al-Youm on Monday, adding, "and we will support him."

A Facebook group campaigning for Shater's nomination said Friday that its members are contacting political figures to support their demand.

Hussein added that the group objects to certain ministers in Prime Minister Hesham Qandil's Cabinet, but refuses to change it fully, as it is an interim government.

In a related development, sources said negotiations are under way with Omar al-Sheikh, chairman of Telecom Egypt, to take over as communications minister, succeeding Hany Mahmoud, who has resigned. Atef Helmy, former president of Oracle, declined the position.

They also said Ahmed al-Rokaiby is about to accept the post of supply and internal trade minister.

Meanwhile, a Cabinet source said the president would soon announce the reshuffle.

President Mohamed Morsy revealed Wednesday his plans for a Cabinet reshuffle.

Morsy, in a televised speech on the adoption of the country's new Constitution, said, "I asked Qandil and consulted with him to make appropriate ministerial reshuffles suitable for [this] stage, to face all problems large and small problems".

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The ballot and the street

“The President and the Brotherhood take credit for the most significant achievement the opposition made this year,” says Tamer al-Mihy, member of the political bureau of the Social Democratic Party. “That they started to unite and work together,” he reckons.

Mihy is speaking about the National Salvation Front, an umbrella group of various political groups and personalities that formed in November to oppose Islamist hegemony over the political scene. The front offered a form of political representation to a growing anti-Islamist street movement.

Scores had been gathering outside the presidential palace and in Tahrir Square to protest President Mohamed Morsy’s controversial power grab through a constitutional declaration, parts of which he later rescinded under popular pressure.

So far, the front has managed to remain relatively united throughout the fast-moving political developments of November and December.

The future, however, poses two challenges to this nascent political opposition.

The first is how to contest a robust Islamist movement, which has on its side repeated electoral victories. The second is how to represent a street movement that often resists political representation.

Eye on the ballot

Opposition parties and figures who rose to prominence after the revolution have learned the hard way that they cannot make political gains without uniting against more organized Islamist powers, especially those with decades-long organizational experience.

In the run-up to last year’s parliamentary elections, 14 liberal and leftist parties formed an electoral alliance, The Egyptian Bloc. However, parties dropped out of the alliance one by one due to disagreements over seat distribution; come election day, the alliance was comprised of only three parties. The bloc also had to compete for non-Islamist votes with another liberal electoral alliance, the Revolution Continues.

Islamist groups, spearheaded by the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafi Nour Party, meanwhile, took 70 percent of seats in parliament.

In the presidential elections, the same non-Islamist players remained divided, and the revolutionary vote was split. Nasserist leader Hamdeen Sabbahi, Muslim Brotherhood defector Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh and leftist human rights lawyer Khaled Ali — all considered candidates of the revolution — ran separately. None of them made it to the runoffs.

The results of this month’s constitutional referendum suggest the united opposition is much more competetive. The 63.8 percent with which the Islamist-friendly constitution was approved reflects a weakening of Islamists’ electoral prowess, with less than 33 percent of eligible voters showing up to the polls.

With new parliamentary elections expected to be held within the next two months, the electoral field will become once again a proving ground for the opposition.

Hassan Abu Taleb, a political expert at Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, says whether the front remains united will depend on whether its member parties can put aside their own political interests and continue to fight together against the domination of the Islamist current.

There is more demand for unity now than in past elections, says Mihy, and steeper political consequences for parties that decide to run independently. Thus, there is a greater chance, he says, that the opposition will remain unified.

“We all agree on the general goals of restraining a fascist authority and changing the constitution,” he says. “Now there’s popular pressure that will make it difficult for a party to announce it is leaving the ranks of the united opposition. It would be political suicide.”

Mihy says that to improve its ability to mobilize voters, the front aims to build a strong, institutionalized mechanism and enhance communication between Cairo and the governorates. The referendum showcased the opposition’s significant weakness outside major urban centers.

He adds that over the last few months, opposition party bases have worked together in the governorates as teams, which they will be resistant to dismantle.

Amid speculation over what form future cooperation between front members will take, Wahid Abdel Meguid, a member of the front’s political bureau, tells Egypt Independent that the front is considering running its members on one list in the upcoming elections.

Abu Taleb says the front’s major task now is to work toward securing at least half the seats in the parliament and then to use those gains to bring down the constitution through legislative means.

“If they run on one list, [opposition parties] will see a strong victory and change the current political landscape, which is dominated by the Brotherhood and the Salafis,” he says.

Abdel Meguid denies rumors that the front will start a new party; however, he says some parties in the front are planning to merge.

Eye on the street

While the front says the upcoming elections are its priority, it also vows to continue working as a revolutionary force in the street.

Leading members of the front have stressed that while it will participate in electoral politics, the front refuses to accept the status quo the ruling Muslim Brotherhood has forced on the country.

“We represent a revolutionary opposition and also an institutional opposition that works through the legitimate mechanisms of elections, and when the rights of the people are being violated, we stand with them in the street through protests and sit-ins, which are additional tools of opposition,” says Abdel Meguid.

Many in the leadership value the street movement as the compass of the opposition.

“The most important development in the opposition is that it has learned that it’s not about figures or stars. What determines their success is the amount of work they do in the street,” says Abu Taleb. “Without work on the street, the figures remain leaders without soldiers, and everyone loses.”

Meanwhile, Akram Ismail, a member of the Popular Socialist Alliance who credits the opposition’s organizational development with an increasing ability to mobilize on a street level, is concerned with the movement’s potential.

“The opposition’s political power is capable of creating pressure on the rule of the Brotherhood, but not replacing it,” he says. “They can disrupt a lot of things, but they cannot take initiative.”

“The opposition is not one party with one agenda; it’s a wide alliance that spans from the liberal right to the socialist left,” he says, which can pose a structural impediment to its political ascendancy.

But for him, and at least for now, the opposition’s agenda is not to rule but to pressure the ruling Brotherhood to make compromises that lead to a more democratic state and hinder “their attempt to rebuild dictatorial rule.”

This piece appears in Egypt Independent's weekly print edition.

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The Muslim Brotherhood and its Freedom and Justice Party have started preparing for upcoming parliamentary and municipal elections. They have already arranged continuous visits to different electoral districts over the coming period.

Regarding rumors that the Brotherhood is trying to lure voters by providing jobs to youth, including 10,000 in Suez, Mostafa al-Ghoneimy, member of the Guidance Bureau, said jobs provided by the group are not included within campaigning.

He added that offering jobs has been one of the Brotherhood's commitments toward society since it was established over 80 years ago.

“The Brotherhood and its party have drawn up a plan to ensure employment of youth in both the public and private sectors to enhance their incomes,” Ghoneimy added.

Karem Radwan, member of the Brotherhood’s Shura Council, said the group is working on reducing the unemployment rate.

In Alexandria, the Brotherhood and FJP have formed committees to supervise elections, select candidates and announce results. The administrative office held several meetings on the selection of figures who will run, as well as the issue of cooperating with other political forces.
 
Committees that took part in preparing for the constitutional referendum will also resume work on electoral campaigning.

Mohamed Halim Hassan, acting secretary of the party in Minya, said several measures will be taken as part of the preparations. Training, for instance, will be providing on electoral campaigning.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The Muslim Brotherhood Youth have called on President Mohamed Morsy to clarify the reasons behind his recent actions.

The people need clarification on the president’s decision-making process and what happens within state institutions, including the appointment and dismissal of officials, said Mohamed Haddad, a Brotherhood Youth member in the Delta city of Mahalla.

“We need, like other people, a clear understanding of each decision taken by the Cabinet and presidency,” Haddad said, adding that he wondered why the president didn’t provide more details regarding the conspiracy he claimed was afoot to overthrow him and the revolution.

Haddad also said that a new, partisan Cabinet should be formed that would be able to carry out the president’s electoral promises and be held accountable for the state’s actions.

The Brotherhood Youth are troubled by the Morsy administration’s lack of transparency, said Mohamed Saeed, a Brotherhood member from Alexandria. The youth question their group leaders but are unable to get firm answers, Saeed added.

However, other members have defended the fact that the Brotherhood has a democratic structure allowing for differences within its ranks.

Brotherhood leader Ahmed al-Hag said that it is natural to find different points of view in any group. Youth members ask their leaders daily about the reasons behind the state’s decisions, and the leaders reply with whatever information they have, Hag said.

Hag added that he agrees with some demands of the youth, but disagrees with others. He also explained that the Brotherhood organizes small groups that hold weekly meetings to discuss different visions and suggestions.

The Muslim Brotherhood does not run the Morsy administration, Hag said. For instance, when the Cabinet moved to increase prices, Brotherhood leaders were against that decision, he added.

Some youth also said that the opposition to Morsy’s rule is not unified.

Saeed said there are two fronts currently facing off in Egypt: the first includes the president and Islamists, and the second includes the revolutionary forces, the deep state and the remnants of Mubarak regime. He added the second group aims to hinder national progress.

He also maintains that some state institutions are derailing Morsy's mission.

The Interior Ministry’s slow response to the recent attacks on Muslim Brotherhood and Freedom and Justice Party headquarters, as compared to how quickly the ministry responded to attacks on the Wafd Party headquarters, suggests that there is an anti-Islamist conspiracy, Saeed said.

Haddad added the ministry needs to be purged of corruption, as does the judiciary.

A number of young Brotherhood members have defected from the group over the last two years in protest against the guidance bureau's policies.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The Muslim Brotherhood has called on the Supreme Judicial Council to reject Prosecutor General Talaat Abdallah’s resignation, and to denounce prosecutors for assaulting him.

The council has said it would decide whether or not to accept Abdallah’s resignation on Sunday.

President Mohamed Morsy had appointed Abdallah in late November to secede former Prosecutor General Abdel Meguid Mahmoud, a move that sparked outrage in the judiciary.

Abdallah announced his resignation on Monday after prosecutors had demonstrated outside his office demanding that he leave his position.

Protesters were decrying Abdallah’s recent decision to transfer prosecutor Mostafa Khater, who was investigating the violent clashes that occurred outside the presidential palace two weeks ago, to Beni Suef. Abdallah then reversed his decision.

In a statement issued on Monday, the Brotherhood said the prosecutors forced Abdallah to resign with threats, something that was unprecedented in the history of the judiciary. The called it a violation of the judiciary’s independence, dignity, immunity and freedom.

The Brotherhood also claimed on its Facebook page on Tuesday that some demonstrators demanding Abdallah’s resignation had carried weapons. They demanded those protesters be investigated and punished.

The group also urged the Interior Ministry to protect judges from aggression.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The United Arab Emirates' Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed has rejected claims by Muslim Brotherhood members that his country is plotting Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy's overthrow.

Emirati news agency WAM reported that Zayed met with Egyptian ambassador to the UAE Tamer Mansour and raised concerns about "fabricated remarks broadcast recently by some media in Egypt involving accusations against the UAE, including the allegation that it was engaged in plots against the Egyptian leadership."

Freedom and Justice Party member Mohamed Mossad Yaqout had recently alleged that Egyptian opposition forces were trying to overthrow Morsy with help from a "Gulf cell."

His comments echo recent allegations by Brotherhood members that the UAE's ambassador to Egypt was involved in an assassination plot against Morsy.

Zayed denied the allegations and urged Mansour to open a legal investigation into the claims.

"He stressed to the ambassador the need for the Egyptian government to follow up on these unfounded and slanderous fabrications, which do not serve the fraternal relationship between the two sisterly countries," WAM said.

Relations have been strained between the Brotherhood and the UAE, where the group is outlawed. The wealthy Gulf country maintains a strong grip on internal political opposition, and fears have risen among the country's leadership that the recent wave of popular uprisings in the region could challenge its rule.

Sixty Emiratis were arrested in July on suspicion of belonging to the Brotherhood, and Dubai Police Chief Dahi Khalfan recently slammed the group, saying in a statement to the media that the group behaved like a "mafia."

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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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If the Muslim Brotherhood had militias, “they would have defended themselves in front of the presidential palace and killed the other [protesters],” the vice president of the group’s political party said on privately owned Mehwar channel Sunday night.

Freedom and Justice Party deputy Essam al-Erian told host Amr al-Liethy that for the first time, the Brotherhood is seriously considering arming its youth members to protect its offices. 

Erian directly addressed those he said wished to create chaos in Egypt, particularly foreigners, saying it “will never happen” even if they spent billions of dollars.

“People are smarter than you are,” he said, addressing those plotting against Egypt, “and able to protect themselves and their country.”

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