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Dr. Nafeaa: Regime Rejects All Effective Parties Not Only MB
Muslim Brotherhood cannot be eradicated
Dr. Hassan Nafeaa, head of the Political Sciences Department, Faculty of Economics and Political Sciences, Cairo University, wrote an article in which he reviewed the yearlong conflict of successive regimes in Egypt with the Muslim Brotherhood,
citing the recent arrests which reached out to sixteen Muslim Brotherhood leaders,
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| Tuesday, December 19,2006 00:00 | |||||||||
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Muslim Brotherhood cannot be eradicated Dr. Hassan Nafeaa, head of the Political Sciences Department, Faculty of Economics and Political Sciences, Cairo University, wrote an article in which he reviewed the yearlong conflict of successive regimes in Egypt with the Muslim Brotherhood, citing the recent arrests which reached out to sixteen Muslim Brotherhood leaders, including MB second deputy Chairman, Eng. Khairat el Shater as well as a host of Azhar University students, professors, syndicate leaders and civil society activists. Dr. Nafeaa quoted part of the statement released by the Interior Ministry to the effect that these arrests were made at arrest warrants by the State Security Prosecution after the police were tipped off that those leaders were implicated in riots staged in Azhar University on December 10, 2006. The professor also quoted the said statement as saying that these MB leaders formed deterrence committees, armed them with sticks and iron chains, and ordered them to stage sit-ins and demonstrations and riots in the university, and carry out acts of sabotage against public and private properties. The statement also said that the detained students" tried to do such acts and some of them smashed the university’s main gate and assaulted some professors and students. According to the statement, these incidents were established and referred to the Prosecution immediately". Egyptians tend not to believe Interior Ministry’s statements: Nafeaa briefly traced the history of the Muslim Brotherhood, founded by Hassan el Banna in 1928, saying that the group sustained a lot of ordeals at the hands of all successive regimes since it started to call for establishing a model society. The professor attributed this collision to ideologies adopted by these regimes, mainly the pro-West liberalism at the king’s reign, pro USSR socialism at Nasser’s era, and pro US- Israel policy at Sadat’s era based on the normalization of relations with Israel and further political and economic relations with the US. However, the writer said that while Mubarak’s regime has been and still is keen to steer clear of any direct confrontation with the group, the current escalation of tension between the two parties could lead to an inevitable, all out confrontation. Reviewing the outcome of the confrontation of the group with the successive regimes throughout more than sixty years, the writer said that it is time to learn lessons from these yearlong confrontations, which he summed up as follows: The writer reinforced his assertion by inviting readers to have a look at the recent parliamentary election, when only 23% of the eligible electorate participated. He pointed out that this led to a political polarization on the part of the two parties, with the writer warning that this could lead to an appalling political vacuum, as both parties is not a party in the full sense of the word. To hammer home this viewpoint, the writer said that the ruling party doesn’t take its power from the public support inasmuch as the awe and aura of its security agencies. Likewise, he added, the Muslim Brotherhood power doesn’t reflect the public support inasmuch as the influence of religion on the Egyptian society. Who is to blame for this political standoff? |
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Posted in Other Opinions |
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