Tag: Muslim Brotherhood

  • Egypt tense on revolution’s third anniversary

    Rival political groups in Egypt are to mark the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising which ended in the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak, BBC reports.
    Both supporters of the military-backed government and the Muslim Brotherhood are set to take to the streets.
    The anniversary comes as tensions were heightened by a series of bombs in Cairo and clashes across the country which left at least 18 people dead.
    The government has said extra security measures are in place for Saturday.
    Egyptian Interior Minister, Muhammad Ibrahim, urged Egyptians not to be afraid to go to events marking the anniversary of the uprising.
    But shortly before 06:00 GMT on Saturday, a bomb was thrown at the wall of the police training academy in the Cairo suburb of Ain Shams, reportedly injuring one person.
    No-one has said they carried out the attack. Al-Qaeda-inspired militant group – Ansar Beit al-Maqdis (Champions of Jerusalem) – has said it was behind a deadly attack on the city’s police headquarters on Friday.

    Earlier Mr. Ibrahim warned Brotherhood supporters that any attempt to disrupt festivities would be dealt with firmly.
    The Brotherhood has held regular protests since the military, led by Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, deposed Islamist President Mohammed Morsi last July.

  • Morsi’s trial to resume in Cairo

    Morsi’s trial to resume in Cairo

    Egypt’s deposed President Mohammed Morsi is to appear at a court compound in Cairo amid tight security for the resumption of his trial.

    It was unclear whether he had arrived at the complex early on Wednesday.

    Mr. Morsi and 14 other Muslim Brotherhood figures are accused of inciting the killing of protesters outside a presidential palace in December 2012.

    He was removed by the army last July after demonstrations against his rule.

    His supporters have since held regular protests calling for his reinstatement.

    Last Friday at least 11 people died in clashes between police and pro-Muslim Brotherhood demonstrators across Egypt.

    A helicopter carrying some of the defendants arrived at the National Police Academy complex in Cairo for the hearing early on Wednesday, reporters said.

    However state media said Mr. Morsi’s arrival had been delayed by bad weather.

    BBC reports that security outside the compound is very heavy with three cordons in place.

    Egyptian media said thousands of police were on alert and TV pictures showed some pro-Morsi protesters being arrested as they waved the four-finger salute adopted by supporters of the ousted president.

    A Brotherhood-led protest march is due to take place to coincide with the latest hearing. Tear gas and live fire was used to disperse demonstrators in the Nasr City area of Cairo, witnesses told the BBC.

     

  • 11 killed in fresh Egypt’s unrest

    At least 11 people have died in clashes between police and Muslim Brotherhood demonstrators across Egypt, the health ministry said.

    The Muslim Brotherhood put the death toll at 17. Dozens of people, including police, have been wounded.

    The deaths were reported in the capital Cairo and the cities of Alexandria, Fayoum and Ismailia.

    Authorities have recently intensified a crackdown on the movement, which has been declared a terrorist group.

    In Friday’s violence, police fought with demonstrators, some throwing stones and fireworks and setting police vehicles on fire, in several districts in the capital.

    Authorities said 122 protesters had been arrested.

    The health ministry said 52 people had been wounded in the clashes, with several people reported injured by birdshot in Alexandria.

    BBC reports that the latest clashes come a day after two people were killed in violence at an Islamist demonstration in the northern coastal city.

    Supporters of the Brotherhood’s ousted President Mohammed Morsi have held frequent protests since he was removed by the military in July.

    The Brotherhood, which had been banned since September from all activity, was declared a terrorist group in December after it was blamed for a suicide bombing of a police headquarters in the Nile Delta.

     

     

  • Muslim Brotherhood confronts Egypt ‘anti-terror’ law

    Muslim Brotherhood confronts Egypt ‘anti-terror’ law

    Branded a “terrorist group” in new legislation, Egypt’s largest opposition movement continues its demonstrations. By Dahlia Kholaif

     

    After much pulling and tugging between Egypt’s military-backed government and the Muslim Brotherhood, the state has adopted a highly controversial “anti-terrorism” law that effectively freezes any legal activity from the country’s largest opposition group.

    The law, which criminalises any kind of participation linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, intensifies Egypt’s political polarisation. The legislation comes ahead of a nationwide referendum on the country’s constitution set for January 5.

    The bill was passed after a bomb blast killed 16 people on December 24 in the Nile Delta city of Al Mansoura. Although the law does not include Ansar Bayt al-Makdis, the an al-Qaeda-linked group who claimed responsibility for the attack, legislation does target the Muslim Brotherhood who condemned the assault and whose supporters have been staging daily peaceful protests since the army-led overthrow of President Mohamed Morsi on July 3.

    Despite previous government pledges not to shun any faction from the political scene, the law bolts the lock on the return of a party that has won every vote since the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.

    Human Rights Watch has said the law banning the Brotherhood is “politically driven”.

    Anti-coup protesters, mostly sympathisers of the Muslim Brotherhood, remain determined to stay on the streets, even if it means risking arrest.

    “We will not stop our peaceful struggle,” said Mahmoud, a student at Al-Azhar University, a hotbed of student activism where protests have continued despite a government ban on unauthorised rallies.

    Since the so-called “anti-terror law” passed, at least five protesters have been killed, and almost 300 others have been arrested across the country on charges of “promoting terrorist ideologies”.

    Rather than bringing stability, security crackdowns on younger marchers could provide radical armed groups with new members seeking revenge, analysts said.

    ALGERIAN SCENARIO

    Some fear that Egypt will spiral into a civil war – much like what happened in Algeria when the military-backed government cracked down on the then-popular Islamist Salvation Front (FIS) during the 1990s. The ensuing conflict left about 200,000 people dead.

    “The Algerian scenario is likely to happen in Egypt particularly with the lack of communication between the Muslim Brotherhood’s leadership and its grassroots whom can be attracted and recruited by radical movements,” Khalil al-Anani, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, told Al Jazeera.

    Although the Brotherhood has been operating as an underground movement for decades and its members repeatedly land in Egyptian prisons, many analysts believe the interim government’s crackdown on the group decreases chances for a political solution.

    Most of the movement’s leaders, including Morsi himself, are facing trial on a myriad of charges ranging from inciting violence to espionage. Since July 3, more than 1,000 Morsi supporters have been killed. Critics believe the Egyptian media has spearheaded a smear campaign against Brotherhood members who continue to protest.

    “The current oppression is alienating many young Egyptians, particularly Islamists who [have] lost faith in politics and democracy and might adopt violence as the only way to deal with the current government,” Anani said. “I don’t think that the MB leadership will call for bearing arms against the state but many other non-affiliated sympathisers might.”

    An example of such a call was made by Abu Mohammed al-Adnani, the official spokesman of the al-Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Despite his criticisms of the Brotherhood’s support for non-violence, Adnani has promoted “the rattle of the swords” and the “shedding of blood” to deal with Egypt’s political crisis.

    ‘TERRORISM’ HOTLINES

    In the Sinai, home to more than a dozen armed groups, analysts fear some residents might abandon peaceful protests in favour of violent tacticts as a result of the new law. “The current confrontation between the regime and MB is driven by revenge and became a zero-sum game,” said Anani.

    Bomb attacks were launched in Cairo’s Nasir City district and other parts of the country following the passage of the legislation.

    Mohamed Farghali, a security analyst and researcher, said Muslim Brotherhood members are unlikely to join more radical religious groups, citing “ideological differences” between the two.

    Farghali said that powerful weapons smuggled from Libya and Sudan are available on Egypt’s black market, and he believes the “anti-terror” legislation could “take these [armed] groups to another level”.

    “These groups, which mostly found a foothold in the Sinai amid the security void that followed the January 25 uprising will now dig deeper to avoid the anti-terror law,” he said. “The law does not include them, but it raises the public’s alertness.”

    Immediately after the “anti-terror law” was issued, the Ministry of Interior made hotlines available for citizens to report anyone whom they “suspected” of belonging to or having ties with the Muslim Brotherhood.

    It is this, rather than the reoccurring blasts reminiscent of the wave of attacks that gripped the country in the 1990s, that worries Mohamed Soffar, a professor of political theory and Director of Civilisations Dialogue Center at Cairo University.

    “We are being pulled back to post-state status, where societal and family ties are being abolished and each citizen is being pitted against the other. Violence is now legal as citizens are transformed into vigilantes,” he said.

    Following deadly attacks in Al Mansoura, thousands took to the streets demanding all Muslim Brotherhood affiliates be executed. Although the group has renounced violence since the 1970s, their critics believe otherwise, blaming them for the surge in violence immediately following Morsi’s ouster. Brotherhood opponents cite comments made by currently-jailed senior leader Mohamed al-Beltagy in which he said an end to violence in the Sinai hinges on Morsi’s return.

    ‘THE STATE WILL WIN’

    Along with worries about peace in the Sinai and bomb attacks, some analysts are concerned that anti-government fighters, or indviduals with sympathies for al-Qaeda, have infiltrated the security forces, complicating the crackdown on the Brotherhood.

    “Even the police institution was not sparred. About 280 officers were detained for links to radical armed groups. Suspects arrested included people from the upper class. Extremism is no longer confined to the poor,” Farghali said. This situation could spell the beginning of a protracted and bloody conflict, according to some observers.

    “A real form of dialogue cannot be established amid such severe polarisation, but it is not impossible. We have not yet reached the point of no return,” Soffar said. Egypt and Israel – two historic enemies – were able to establish diplomatic ties, he said, so if they could bridge the gap, Egypt’s feuding population should be able to do the same.

    Anani agrees reconciliation is possible, but warned that: “Egypt is heading towards more uncertainty and instability and democracy seems to be buried.”

    Despite ongoing attacks and street protests, coupled with an economy in crisis, Farghali believe the interim authorities will be able to keep control.

    “At the end of the day, the state will win. It’s a historical fact,” he said. “It even happened in Algeria.”

     

    Courtesy: Aljazeera

  • Morsi arrives for tense Egypt’s trial

    Morsi arrives for tense Egypt’s trial

    Egypt’s ousted President, Mohammed Morsi, has arrived in court in Cairo where he is due to go on trial, state media say.

    He and 14 other Muslim Brotherhood figures face charges of inciting the killing of protesters in clashes outside the presidential palace.

    BBC reports that security services are on high alert after supporters of the former president called for major protests.

    Mr. Morsi was ousted by the military in July after protests against his rule.

    According to state TV, he arrived at the courtroom, inside the Police Academy in Cairo. Other key Brotherhood figures, Essam el-Erian, Mohammed al-Beltagi and Ahmed Abdel Aati are also there.

    While Mr. Morsi was airlifted into the compound by helicopter, other defendants were said to have been brought in by armoured personnel carriers.

    The former president was seen from a distance in civilian clothes, Egyptian radio reported – his first appearance in public since he was ousted on July 3.

    The trial had been due to take place at Tora prison on the other side of Cairo but had been switched late on Sunday, apparently to deter protesters.

    Shortly after Mr. Morsi’s arrival, a small crowd arrived and began chanting outside the sprawling police compound more than one hour’s drive from the centre of the city. The crowd soon grew to number some 200.

    Although Mr. Morsi won the presidency in a democratic election, during his 13 months in power he fell out with key institutions.

    The ex-president is accused of “incitement to murder and violence” over the deaths of at least 10 people during intense clashes in December 2012 which followed a decree that gave him wide-ranging powers.

     

     

  • Egypt arrests senior Islamist leader

    A fugitive senior Muslim Brotherhood leader, Essam el-Erian, has been detained by the Egyptian authorities, BBC reports.

    Prosecutors ordered his arrest in July, after the ousting of President Mohammed Morsi.

    The arrest is the latest move in a government crackdown against the Islamist movement which is now banned.

    State-run news agency Mena said Mr. Erian was expected to stand trial next week along with Mr. Morsi and a dozen other officials.

    A Muslim Brotherhood spokesman told the BBC Mr. Erian was arrested early on Wednesday at an apartment in the New Cairo area and taken to an undisclosed location.

    “You can’t escape your destiny,” Mr. Erian was quoted as saying at the time.

    “I am confident I will be out of prison after putting an end to the coup.”

    An official photo posted on the interior ministry website showed a smiling Mr. Erian standing next to two packed bags.

    Mr. Erian is vice chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party, the Brotherhood’s political wing.

    The BBC says Mr. Erian was a very public face of the Muslim Brotherhood before going into hiding.

    Mr. Morsi is due to stand trial on November 4, charged with inciting murder and violence in connection with clashes outside the presidential palace in December 2012.

    The former president’s supporters announced on Monday that he had rejected the court’s authority.

    Separately, the three presiding judges at the trial of Mohammed Badie, the Brotherhood’s general guide, and his deputy, Khairat al-Shatir, stepped down on Tuesday, halting proceedings.

     

  • Fresh clashes in Egypt ‘kill’ 50

    At least 50 people have been killed and scores hurt in Egypt in clashes between police and supporters of the deposed Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

    BBC says more than 200 members of the Muslim Brotherhood were arrested in Cairo, where most of the deaths were reported.

    Supporters of Mr. Morsi marched in several cities, as the military-backed government marked the 40th anniversary of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war.

    Morsi supporters said he was deposed in a military coup in July.

    Hundreds of people had gathered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square to celebrate the anniversary.

    Jets and Apache helicopters flew overhead in formation, as part of a grand display of military hardware by the government.

    The crowd cheered the flypasts, a number of people carrying portraits of defence chief Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Some want him to stand as Egypt’s next president.

     

  • Egyptian forces raid pro-Morsi town

    Egyptian forces raid pro-Morsi town

    Egyptian security forces are fighting gun battles in a town near Cairo after launching an operation targeting “criminal and terrorist hotbeds.”

    At least 28 suspected militants have been held in Kerdasa, state TV says.

    But several hours after the operation started, security forces took cover from gunfire.

    At least 11 police officers were killed at a police station in Kerdasa last month, weeks after the overthrow of Islamist President Mohamed Morsi in July.

    Soldiers went into Kerdasa at about 05:30 local time (03:30 GMT) on Thursday, backed by helicopters.

    State media said a senior policeman had died in clashes with militants.

    BBC says security forces were exchanging fire with unidentified gunmen who appeared to have taken up positions in a number of buildings in the town.

    Security forces were taking cover behind buildings, the report adds.

    Earlier residents had told the BBC that security forces were searching homes in Kerdasa for members of Mr. Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement.

     

     

  • Egypt Muslim Brotherhood leader Badie held

    The spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Badie, has been arrested in Cairo, Egyptian officials say.

    Reports said he was detained at a residential flat in Nasr City.

    A state of emergency is in force in Egypt amid turmoil following a crackdown on Islamists in which hundreds have died.

    BBC reports that three days of mourning are being held for 25 police killed in Sinai by suspected Islamist militant extremists.

    Almost 900 people, including more than 100 police and soldiers, are reported to have been killed in Egypt since Wednesday, when the army cleared protest camps set up by supporters of deposed President Mohammed Morsi, many of them members of the Muslim Brotherhood movement.

    On Sunday, 36 Islamist protesters died in a prison van in the capital, Cairo.

    Hundreds of members of the Muslim Brotherhood have been detained over recent days.

    Mr. Badie had been on the run as the military-backed interim authorities in Egypt try to suppress protests at the ousting of Mr. Morsi.

    He is facing charges of inciting violence and murder over the killing of eight anti-Brotherhood protesters outside the movement’s headquarters in Cairo last June.

     

  • Egypt cabinet to hold crisis meeting

    Egypt’s cabinet is set to discuss the crisis in the country, where hundreds have died in clashes in recent days.

    The interim prime minister has put forward a proposal to legally dissolve the Muslim Brotherhood, BBC reports.

    Its members are key supporters of Mohammed Morsi, whose ousting as president sparked Egypt’s stand-off.

    The interim government is continuing to crack down on protests by the Brotherhood, but more demonstrations are planned around Cairo on Sunday.

    Overnight, television pictures showed protesters on the streets of Egypt’s second largest city, Alexandria, and in Helwan and Minya to the south of Cairo, in defiance of an overnight curfew.

    On Saturday Egypt’s security forces cleared the al-Fath mosque in Cairo after a long stand-off with Muslim Brotherhood supporters barricaded inside.

    The confrontation at the mosque continued for most of Saturday – with exchanges of gunfire between protesters and security forces, who were cheered on by crowds outside.

    The Brotherhood has called for daily demonstrations since a crackdown on its protest camps in Cairo on Wednesday left hundreds of people dead. Further clashes on Friday killed at least another 173 people across the country.