Africa North |
Egypt Salafi Party Elects New Head after Split |
2013-01-10 |
[An Nahar] Egypt's Islamist Nur party elected a new chief on Wednesday after a split within the powerful ultraconservative Salafi movement splintered the party ahead of parliamentary elections. The party at a general assembly selected Yunis Makhyun, who was a member of parliament until a court annulled the Islamist-dominated house in June, in a vote shown live on television. His party had won 112 seats in that parliament, in a surprise showing for a movement that had mostly eschewed politics before the overthrow of president Hosni Mubarak ...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011... in February 2011. The party's former leader, Emad Abdel Ghaffour, resigned along with 150 members to form al-Watan, a competing Salafi party ahead of fresh elections which are expected after February. Egyptian press reported the split was caused by disagreements over the influence of powerful Salafi holy mans in the Al-Dawaa al-Salafiya group, which had established the Nur party. "We strive to implement Islamic law for Egypt's sake and will work to purify all laws of anything that contradicts shariah," Makhyun said in a speech after his election. Makhyun has been reported in Egyptian press as denouncing as "usury" an IMF loan Egypt wants to boost its precarious economy. Usury is prohibited in Islam. The influence of Salafis, who have a considerably more rigid interpretation of Islam than President Mohamed Morsi's Moslem Brüderbund movement, in particular worries Egypt's Coptic Christian population. Makhyun sought to allay their concerns in his speech, pledging: "You will only see justice and affection from us." Salafis have been blamed for inflaming sectarian tensions in the country, which witnessed a spike of attacks on Copts over the past three years. |
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Tunisia, Egypt Islamists signal bigger religion role | |||||||||||
2012-02-23 | |||||||||||
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Islamist parties swept the first free elections in both countries in recent months after campaigns that stressed their readiness to work with the secularists they struggled with in the Arab Spring revolts against decades-long dictatorships.
Popular List, the party tasked with writing Tunisia's new constitution, announced on Monday its draft called Islam "the principle source of legislation" - a phrase denoting laws based on the sharia moral and legal code. On Tuesday, Egyptian Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie said his group wanted a president with "an Islamic background." That term is vague, but not as vague as the conciliatory "consensus candidate" talk heard from most parties until now.
"Using Islamic sharia as a principle source of legislation will guarantee freedom, justice, social equality, consultation, human rights and the dignity of all its people, men and women," it says.
Hachmi Hamdi, who supported Ennahda before forming Popular List, said the draft was more Islamic than expected because "the public that voted for us is a conservative public that wants sharia as the principle source of the constitution."
But Badie told the daily newspaper of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party on Tuesday that "the candidate must have an Islamic background."
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