Showing posts with label Muslim Brotherhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muslim Brotherhood. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 December 2015

The Different Types of Salafi's

A new article recently published on WarOnTheRocks raised some interesting points regarding the two types of Salafi's the West need to deal with.

I've collated some of the main points here:

If we want to stop the self-proclaimed Islamic State’s recruitment to violence, a better question is how does the group transform centuries-old theological concepts into real and present threats?

Answering that question requires that we begin by stipulating that the Islamic State is a Salafi organization. Salafism is based on an exclusive adherence to this early Islamic Sunni theology. Next, we must recognize the historical division of Salafism between violent and non-violent strains in the 20th century under specific political conditions. Finally, and perhaps most urgently, we might consider the lessons of this history for our own strategic planning today.
Because of its emphasis on redefining Islamic faith and practice, Salafis — both violent and non-violent ones — prioritize their attention on fellow Muslims (Sufis, Shi‘is, even non-Salafi Sunnis) for promoting what they regard as “deviant” interpretations of the faith.
So why do some use this to attack others violently, while others only do so rhetorically? There is only one conceptual factor that drives this decision: the reason why others, in the eyes of different Salafis, fail to adopt their worldview. To non-violent Salafis, the reason they give is misinformation and misunderstanding — not having been exposed to their theological views. Innocence by omission. For violent ones, the reason is because of a deliberate resistance to it — an expression of the internal “unbelief” in God’s monotheism (kufr). Guilt by commission, and commission of the religion’s gravest sin, violating God’s “oneness.”
This divide is nearly as old as the religion itself, and was a core question underlying the evolution of early Islamic theology. On the one hand there stood Ahmad Ibn Hanbal (d. 855CE) and his circle (the so-called People of Hadith), who held that one’s faith is expressed in one’s “heart, tongue and limbs.” On the other, the more rationalist schools argued that this faith is only in the heart and tongue and need not be confirmed by actions of the limbs.


This debate surfaced in the 20th century as a fault line between violent and non-violent Salafis, who — unlike other Sunnis — ostensibly all identified with the People of Hadith in their theology, but who, in practice, came to different conclusions about the practical implications of this theology. The watershed moment came in 1986, when one Safar al-Hawali (b. 1950) put the finishing touches on his dissertation for the Saudi Umm al-Qura University. In it, Hawali — who, although not a jihadist, would be later regarded as something of their intellectual ally — attacked one Muhammad Nasir al-Din al-Albani (d. 1999) for the latter’s view that one’s failure to pray was not a sign of “unbelief,” but rather could have been caused by laziness, oversleeping, or some other non-doctrinal factor. For Hawali, a Muslim’s neglect of proper Islamic conduct was evidence of ceasing to be Muslim. For Albani, who would later become the doyen of the so-called “quietist” strain of Salafism, a Muslim’s neglect of prayer was a sin but did not change one’s Muslim status.

In the 1990s, these positions became the core kernel of a new and broader debate on the issue of takfir (excommunication of other Muslims). Specifically, under what circumstances may Muslims excommunicate other Muslims, and thereby justify engaging in violence against them? On the one hand there were those who believed, as Hawali did, that failure to act in an Islamic way nullified one’s Islamic identity — these formed the intellectual nucleus of jihadism. On the other stood the quietists, Albani’s progeny, who resisted drawing the link between the need to behave in an Islamic way and the reasons for not doing so.

This became the debate between violent Salafis (or jihadists) and the non-violent ones (quietists), and the labels they used to attack one another are revealing of the sensitivities of each. Quietist Salafis almost universally refrain from referring to jihadists by their proper ideological designation as “Salafi-jihadists,” but rather use the term “takfiri” or “extremist,” referring to their singular focus on using takfir as a justification for wanton bloodletting. Quietist Salafis further argue that they too have principles of takfir and jihad, but that these are enshrined in a “methodology” — i.e. there is a time and a place for them. The names of early Islamic sects are also commonly invoked as labels for each group, but these are used strategically in a derogatory way and do not, as we saw earlier, reflect the actual theological positions on which each relies (examples include “Kharijites” for jihadists, and “Murji’ites” for quietists). In other words, their use is akin to how Westerners would freely use the “Fascist” label to describe any form of bigotry, despite its frequently ahistorical use.
It goes on to interestingly state that the Salafi's are not different to those who compromise their deen and enter into the political framework. The author recognises himself that this is in itself unislamic yet the Salafi's do not?





In Egypt, perhaps noting Sisi’s wide-ranging crackdown on journalists, Salafis continue to lament the “media campaigns” against them as their primary concern. Salafis have even competed in elections — a violation of one of their cardinal principles of rejecting modern institutions — since that, for them, was a mechanism of survival within the specific context of Egyptian politics under Sisi. Indeed, over the last year, Egypt’s Salafi Nour Party was able to navigate the country’s political turbulence by branding itself an ally of the state in combatting terrorism, rather than siding with their pro-Morsi Salafi counterparts in demanding Sisi’s ouster. In short, these examples demonstrate that the survival of Salafi groups within local political circumstances are just as much expressions of their pragmatic skills as they are of their ideological commitments. However, since their ideology is often used as justification for the decisions they make, one might also conclude that, just as with the divide between non-violent and violent Salafism at the end of the last century, the practical implications of Salafi ideology in the present century is equally conditioned by local contexts as it is by long-established theological concepts.

Thursday, 17 December 2015

Where are the Muslim Brotherhood Taking the Ummah of Mohammed (saw)? - By Abu Usaid

The Muslim Brotherhood have sold Syria for a trifling worldly gain after they had forsaken Islam in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Yemen and Sudan. For a Muslim to sacrifice his wealth and his life to establish a state in which he is commanded to disbelieve is beyond comprehension. "They wish to refer legislation to Taghut, while they were commanded to reject it; and Satan wishes to lead them far astray." [4-60]
The deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood of Syria, Mohammad Farouk Tayfour, who attended the Riyadh meeting yesterday, said in an exclusive interview with al-Arabiya.net: "The Muslim Brotherhood in Syria  have never viewed the revolution as a secular or religious issue." He added: "The revolution is a nationalist issue that excludes no one." He also confirmed the openness of the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria to dealing with the West and the US by saying: "We have our special method and we have a similar vision to that of the Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia and the Congregation for Reform in Yemen." In respect of the notion of Khilafah and the group's opinion on it in Syria, he explained that "the specifics and the conclusive evidences on the issue of ruling in Islam are limited." And on the Muslim Brotherhood's relationship with al-Nusrah Front, he said: "We have made great strides in terms of deepening the principle of centrism and moderation but we are yet to reach an agreement on their willingness to sever their ties with al-Qaeda." 
No one disputes the fact that the notion of "nationalism", from which Dr Tayfour is departing, is built upon the doctrine of separating religion from life and it removes the barriers and boundaries between Islam and Kufr; otherwise how could one reconcile between the exigencies of nationalism which legitimises the accession of a citizen to power irrespective of his religion and the prohibition of a non-Muslim assuming power? Allah (swt) says:"And never will Allah give the unbelievers a way over the believers." [4-141] Ibnul-Arabi said: "Indeed Allah (swt) does not allow the Kuffar a way over the believers in Shari'ah; and if it were to materialise, it would be contrary to Shari'ah." Allah (swt) says: "O you who believe, obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority from among you." [4-59] This proves in a conclusive manner that authority belongs to the Muslims because the address in the ayah is to the Muslims and Allah's (swt) saying "from among you" denotes that the supreme authority belongs exclusively to the Muslims; Allah (swt) has also forbidden us from obeying the Kuffar by saying:"O you who believe if you pay heed to those who are bent on denying the truth, they will cause you to turn back on your heels and you will be the losers." [3-149]

Another ayah denoting the prohibition of the Kafir's authority over the Muslim is Allah's (swt) saying: "O you who believe do not take the Kuffar as allies in preference to the believers". [4-144] Al-Qurtubi said about this: "This means do not take as your confidential and close staff from among them." It is also reported on the authority of Ubadah Ibnul-Samit that he said: "The Prophet () called us and we gave him the Pledge of allegiance for Islam..... to be obedient to the ruler and give him his right even if he did not give us our right, and not to fight against him unless we noticed him having open Kufr (disbelief) for which we would have a proof with us from Allah." Qadi Ayyadh said: "If he were to commit Kufr or to change the Shari'ah or concoct an innovation, he would deviate from the authority and his obedience would be nullified; and the Muslims would have to stand up to him and remove him, and establish a fair Imam if they could; and if this were to only occur to a group, they ought to undertake the removal of the Kafir."
Hence, how does the concept of nationalism and the criterion of citizenship that Tayfour is calling for tally with the Islamic system he has been commanded to establish?
These evidences are sufficient to demolish the foundation upon which the thought of Dr Tayfour is built and they are binding on every member and supporter of the Muslim Brotherhood movement to return to the Book of Allah (swt) and act according to it before calling the masses to it. The movement should refrain from deceiving people with the slogan of "Allah is our aspiration and the Qur'an is our constitution" because they stand the farthest from it; and Allah (swt) says: "O you who believe why do you say one thing and do another? Most loathsome in the sight of Allah that you say what you do not do." [61-2,3] 
If the decision maker in the Syrian file has assigned to the Muslim Brotherhood the task of dissuading al-Nusrah Front from pursuing armed struggle and of luring them into the camp of "moderation and centrism" instead, they should then refrain from trumpeting the slogan of "Jihad is our way" and tinkering with the Ummah's objective. 
Dr Tayfour says the Muslim Brotherhood has never viewed the revolution as either a "secular or a religious" issue; so what is their issue then? Does he want to justify his acceptance of the state's secularity or does he want us to understand that dealing with the issue through religion would cast a shadow over the victory that descends from the White House? If the plane of the struggle against the regime were not an issue of Islam and Kufr, how would we then describe the presence of the Muslim Brotherhood in the revolution?  Was it a cheap functional reaction to the American exigencies to shape the Middle East? Or was it an exploitation of Islam to solidify secularism and secure its embracing among the masses? Or was it meant to deviate the direction of the Muslims and curtail their aspiration to achieve liberation and revival?
The statements of Dr Tayfour about the conclusive evidences on the legitimate Khilafah being limited indicates very clearly that the Muslim Brotherhood have washed their hands of the Ummah's central issue and submitted to the volition of the colonialist Kafir West regarding the regime they intend to establish on the ruins of Bashar Assad's regime. Tayfour is attempting to belittle the issue of the Khilafah and propagate the secularist state to the masses in Syria under the pretext that the "conclusive" evidences for al-Khilafah are limited. By disowning the Khilafah system, Tayfour is also attempting to provide support for the outcome of the Riyadh meeting and to dissipate the Western fears of the Islamic trait sported by the "opposition" movements, thus aping the American viewpoint towards Islam. He is also attempting to nullify the Russian arguments and justifications for rejecting the "Islamic" movements and present his group to the West as being a match to their foster child Erdoğan as a guardian of secularism.  
Hence, the call of the Muslim Brotherhood through Dr Tayfour contradicts the conclusive texts of the Qur'an and the Sunnah, violates the volition of the Muslims, squanders their dignity and their sacrifices and gives a way to the Kuffar over the Muslims. No sincere Muslim should accept or support such a call.
"O you who believe do not betray Allah and the Messenger and do not knowingly betray the trust that has been reposed in you." [8-27]
13 December 2015  
by Abu Usaid

Wednesday, 11 November 2015

Hossam Bahgat - The US-funded journalist to push for Human Rights and Democracy in Egypt



Hossam Bahgat, a name that has been mentioned quite a few times over the past month or so. The Egyptian journalist who has been detained by Egyptian authorities and claimed to have suffered detention and torture. Although it is horrendous for anyone to have suffered such, we need to look deeper into why the media is focusing on a single journalist in Egypt that has suffered when hundreds of Muslim Brotherhood members have not only been tortured but murdered.

It doesn't take long to find that Hossam Bahgat is funded by the terrorist sponsor George Soros Foundation, Open Society. He sits neatly on the advisory board under the Open Society Justice Initiative. Soros has built a global empire of networked nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) allegedly promoting "human rights," "freedom," "democracy," and "transparency." His Open Society Institute funds amongst many others, Amnesty International (page 10), Global Voices, and Human Rights Watch. In reality these NGOs constitute a modern day network of imperial administrators, undermining national governments around the world and replacing them with a homogeneous "civil society" that interlocks with "international institutions" run from and on behalf of Wall Street and London. And contrary to popular belief, Soros has built this empire, not against "conservative" ambitions, but with their full cooperation.

It is difficult to find a cause Soros' Open Society Institute supports that is not also funded, directed, and backed by the US State Department-funded, Neo-Conservative lined National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and its various subsidiaries including Freedom House, the International Republican Institute (IRI) and the National Democratic Institute (NDI).

It would be almost four months after the beginning of the so-called "Arab Spring" before the corporate-media would admit that the US had been behind the uprisings and that they were anything but "spontaneous," or "indigenous." In an April 2011 article published by the New York Times titled, "U.S. Groups Helped Nurture Arab Uprisings," it was stated:

"A number of the groups and individuals directly involved in the revolts and reforms sweeping the region, including the April 6 Youth Movement in Egypt, the Bahrain Center for Human Rights and grass-roots activists like Entsar Qadhi, a youth leader in Yemen, received training and financing from groups like the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute and Freedom House, a nonprofit human rights organization based in Washington."

The article would also add, regarding the US National Endowment for Democracy (NED):

"The Republican and Democratic institutes are loosely affiliated with the Republican and Democratic Parties. They were created by Congress and are financed through the National Endowment for Democracy, which was set up in 1983 to channel grants for promoting democracy in developing nations. The National Endowment receives about $100 million annually from Congress. Freedom House also gets the bulk of its money from the American government, mainly from the State Department. "

George Soros and his Open Society Institute also played a leading role in the unfolding unrest. Soros, in addition to fully supporting many of the NGOs in tandem with NED and the US State Department, also funded opposition groups working well in advance to produce new "constitutions" for collapsed nations.

In "George Soros & Egypt's New Constitution," it was reported:


"It turns out that the new Egyptian Constitution has already been drafted, not by the Egyptian people, but by the very US-backed protesters who brought about regime change in the first place. A Reuters report quoted an opposition judge, who had been hiding-out in Kuwait until Mubarak's ousting, as having said civil society groups had already produced several drafts and a new constitution could be ready in a month.

These "civil society" groups include the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information openly funded by George Soros' Open Society Institute and the Neo-Con lined NED fundedEgyptian Organization for Human Rights. It appears that while the International Crisis Group may be turning out the strategy, and their trustee ElBaradei leading the mobs into the streets, it is the vast array of NGOs their membership, including Soros, fund that are working out and implementing the details on the ground."

So why all this commotion regarding Hossam Bahgat's detention? It would seem as though the Americans are trying to gain Hossam some credibility amongst the public. Preparing him for a key role in further democratising Egypt in the future? He's certainly gaining credibility amongst the Muslim Brotherhood.

I'll let you join the dots... 

Monday, 1 June 2015

Tension between #Cairo and #Riyadh escalates over #Brotherhood in #Syria and #Yemen - MidEastMonitor

Sources: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/articles/middle-east/18963-tension-between-cairo-and-riyadh-escalates-over-brotherhood-in-syria-and-yemen


Official sources in Egypt have said that Cairo has conveyed to Riyadh its concern over what it describes as "an exaggeration" in opening up to the Muslim Brotherhood in the Arab world and "attempts to rely on the group in resolving the crisis" in Yemen and containing the situation in Syria. This, claims the Egyptian regime, will definitely lead to adverse consequences for regional stability; once the Brotherhood seizes the reins of government in certain Arab countries with the help of Saudi Arabia it will not stop there but will seek to seize control over all Arab capitals.
"Saudi Arabia itself," said one source, "despite its tight internal security policy, may find itself facing a new predicament associated with the Brotherhood, just like the other Gulf States. In this regard we have been talking to our brothers in the United Arab Emirates in an attempt to raise the issue quietly within the framework of the Gulf Cooperation Council."
There is widespread dismay within the folds of the Syrian opposition, he added, because of the enhanced communication between Saudi Arabia and the Muslim Brotherhood there in parallel with Turkish military support for Syrian factions affiliated with the movement in one way or another. European diplomatic sources have told Al-Shorouk that the countries they represent have informed Cairo, directly or indirectly, that any vision of the political future of Syria after Assad cannot exclude the Brotherhood in the way that Egypt wants.
According to the same Europeans, it is not possible to expect Saudi Arabia to counter the increasing involvement of Lebanon's Hezbollah in support of Bashar Al-Assad in Syria without Riyadh taking action in order to mobilise what it considers to be the "likely Sunni" alternative. This is a reference to the Sunni forces that are not part of the ISIS umbrella; the Saudis consider the moves by Hezbollah to be a Shia dynamic supported by Iran, Riyadh's arch enemy.
In the meantime, officials in Cairo say that the Egyptian regime has received an unequivocal message about the rise in the level of discomfort among Yemeni factions opposed to the Houthi expansion as a result of the rise in Saudi support for the Brotherhood in the country. He added that leaders of the Yemeni factions have told Cairo of their displeasure with the political prescription that may come out of the ongoing communication between Saudi Arabia and the Islamic movement. "I think that they do not object to allocating a share for the Brotherhood but they can see that Saudi Arabia is heading towards offering the movement a majority and not just a share."
As for the Saudis themselves, according to Arab and Western diplomatic sources they do not intend to change their strategy or ideas regarding Yemen. "With regards to Yemen," said one European ambassador in the Egyptian capital, "we know very clearly that Riyadh is angry because of what it considers to be balking on the part of Cairo and a failure to provide support. The House of Saud does not intend to listen to what the Egyptians have to say. With Syria, the matter may be slightly different, whereby Riyadh will seek to ensure Egyptian support of some kind. It will proceed with formulating something and then will ask Cairo to support it, but it will not move in conjunction with Cairo."
The Egyptian government has told the Saudis that it understands their concern regarding the Iranian expansion "We share some of that concern," said a diplomatic source. "However, at the same time we do not want to confront religious forces with other religious forces."
He acknowledges that Riyadh is accusing Cairo of hindering its moves that are aimed at grouping together political formulations with a Brotherhood base in both Yemen and Syria. "We cannot support the ascension of the Brotherhood to power in any Arab state, however; for us this is a closed case."
Egyptian officials across various sectors keep reiterating the same phrases about the Turkey-Qatar concord intended to boost the ascension of the Muslim Brotherhood to power in as many Arab capitals as possible in what they insist is a move prompted from within some political circles in Washington which want to put Islamists in power. The talk in this regard is focused on the White House and not the State Department.

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Sisi shoots his foot again, but don't worry it's still metal plated and 'Made in America'


It was not long ago when Sisi carried out a coup d'état in Egypt and took to the throne. He carried out certain actions that didn't help his image, such as the closure of tunnels that served as a lifeline for the Palestinians in Gaza with recently around 521 tunnels having been discovered and closed. He ordered the demolishment of all facilities and housing within the buffer zone (500m or 0.3 miles, west of the Gaza Strip) and vowed that he would compensate those who have lost their homes and businesses - yet he has not delivered his promise and left thousands homeless not unlike 'Israel' (Occupied Palestine) who extend their settlement boundaries and do the same.

The recent death sentence to many handed down en-masse as well as to ousted Muslim Brotherhood leader, Morsi, means that not only does it make it difficult to engage with Sisi locally but also internationally he is having issues with making friends. President of Germany, Norbert Lammert,  has expressed no interest in meeting the Egyptian leader stating that his human rights record nor the democratic evolution of Egypt shows any progress.

It begs the question to why Sisi was put in there in the first place. US's hollow rhetoric regarding his coup expressed implicit blessings and why not? He has managed to achieve those things that other Presidents failed to deliver for the U.S. in such a short space of time. It seems as if he is the man of action for the West and not to mention the cooperation in the war on Muslims in Libya, his public abhorrence of the Islamic texts (Including the Quran) which he thinks have been wrongly sacralized by the masses etc.






Sources:
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/europe/18792-president-of-german-parliament-explains-refusal-to-meet-al-sisi

Friday, 15 May 2015

Al-Sisi distances himself from Al-Badawi leaks

Source: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/articles/africa/18627-al-sisi-distances-himself-from-al-sayyid-al-badawi-leaks

Jamal Sultan
The audio recordings attributed to Wafd Party leader Al-Sayyid Al-Badawi and leaked by journalist Abd Al-Rahim Ali yesterday came as a big surprise.

The leaked audio recordings follow other political leaks released and publicised this week to the effect that Al-Badawi is "no more" – he is literally "finished", or, as Egyptians would say, he needs to "make him a prayer". All these are expressions for one thing, namely that certain circle within Egypt have decided to get rid of Al-Badawi.
Speculations are now confined to the manner in which he will be finished off. Will some of the charges be brought against him (leading to a lawsuit)? There are many well-known avenues for this, including repeated complaints made to the public prosecution, such as one made by the United Arab Emirates. These, incidentally, pave the way for action. Or could this be just an internal coup within the Wafd Party to bring him down? Or could it be a "freezing" process in the manner of the infamous Safwat Al-Sharif; orchestrating a division within the party that consequently leads it to being suspended until the matter of the division is sorted out, either by mutual consent or in a court of law (though one should be reminded of the famous grandeur of the language used by Safwat Al-Sharif stating that neither a court decision nor an out of court settlement will resolve the problem).
Clearly, these leaks are offered by official security circles that have the capabilities and the authority to eavesdrop on politicians, journalists and activists. Yet, pinpointing who specifically stands behind the leaks remains the problem as there are many circles that possess such resources and powers.
However, what is truly surprising in this regard is not the vilification of Al-Badawi. Only once or twice in the audio leak is he vilified in terms of showing him to be biased in favour of the Muslim Brotherhood and flattering them because he was hoping they would support his candidacy in the presidential elections, though it was rather strange that Al-Badawi should have had such an ambition at the time.
What is truly dangerous about these leaks, if proven to be authentic, is that they undermine Al-Sisi himself and deal a fatal blow to his own project. They may even result in refuting much of the official narrative regarding the events of 30 June 2013.
The leaks show that preparations for crushing the Muslim Brotherhood and "slaughtering them" were planned in 2012 long before the presidential elections. The leaks also charge the security apparatus and accuse it of orchestrating terrorist attacks in order to seize control and create a climate of fear.
This is very puzzling indeed. What interest is served by the security circles that leaked these recordings as a result of propagating such a horrific image; an image that will harm President Abd Al-Fattah Al-Sisi himself more than anyone else? That is, assuming that the leaks were deliberate and premeditated. One just cannot imagine that whoever made the leaks did not see the seriousness of what they were doing. It is in fact more important and more dangerous than the story about the relationship between Sayyid Al-Badawi himself and the Muslim Brotherhood. It is no secret that all political powers at the time had some sort of a relationship with the Muslim Brotherhood, and some even went as far as entering into political and electoral alliances with the group, including Hamdin Sabbahi and his party.
Just one day after the leaks were broadcast, Al-Sisi took everyone by surprise when he called for a meeting with the leader of the Wafd Party and a number of party leaders. This was an absolutely unexpected and unusual political conduct; it is a blatant intervention in the affairs of an independent party – or at least this how it is supposed to seem. It would appear that the President of the Republic is playing the role of a reference point for the party or acting as if he were acting on behalf of the Council of Trustees or as if he were its leader, intervening to settle a dispute, coordinating action and keeping things under control.
Yet, what is more important is that Al-Sisi's invitation to Al-Badawi on the morning of the cannot be dissociated from the issue of the leaks themselves and the row they stirred up. More clearly, Al-Sisi's invitation to Al-Badawi, which may politically translate as a courteous act showing respect for him and also providing him with protection on behalf of the institution of the presidency, means that Al-Sisi wished to convey a message to Al-Badawi, to his party and beyond that to the entire public opinion that he had nothing to do with the leaks, that he is not happy about them, that he never consented to them and even that he is dismayed and angry about the way in which they were propagated.
What the President did for Al-Sayyid Al-Badawi created an impression, which no political observer could miss, that there are certain circles seeking to undermine him, whether knowingly or otherwise, and that he is outraged as a result. It may even give the impression that there is a power struggle among different wings that do not care about the public interest.
The coming weeks will reveal more about this power struggle. It will either be resolved and settled, or it will lead to more chaos.
Translated from Al Mesryoon newspaper, 14 May 2015

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Leaked recordings reveal Al-Badawi's prior knowledge of 2013 massacres and MB oust

Source: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/africa/18625-leaked-recordings-reveal-al-badawis-prior-knowledge-of-2012-massacres

An interesting leak in Egypt clearly shows that it was not 'democracy' that brought Muslim Brotherhood to power but rather it was external influences. Purposefully aimed at destroying the group as well as its loyalties by its many supporters.
Key Points:
"The recordings reveal that everything that the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt has been subjected to in the wake of the revolution, including the killings, had been planned for many years by the Egyptian security agencies with the full knowledge and participation of Al-Badawi"
The other person who responds seems to be a senior security figure in the establishment, as he was addressing Al-Wafd's leader by his first name: "Oh Sayyid. The upcoming period will be a dark one for the Brotherhood. Armed militias will slaughter them in their own houses. Egypt will be full of orchestrated terrorism to retaliate against the Brotherhood and seek revenge from the revolution that brought down the security apparatus."

Monday, 23 February 2015

Sisi Vows to Free “Innocent Youths”

http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/prominent-egyptian-activist-gets-prison-term-sisi-vows-free-innocent-youths%E2%80%9D

We know al-Sisi is wanting to give the moderate youths of Muslim Brotherhood the chance to join the political framework of Egypt so this news does not come as a surprise. It would be interesting to see if they use these youths to form a new secular version of Muslim Brotherhood - and deal with the old guard.

From Source:
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi promised on Sunday to release young people who may have been wrongly jailed during a military crackdown on the opposition since he overthrew his Islamist predecessor in 2013.
He said journalists had complained that there were innocent people in prison, so he told them to draw up a list.
"I told them I don't deny there might be innocent youths" in prison, Sisi said.
"Over the next few days the first group of our youths in detention will be released," he added.

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

US confirms that Brotherhood is not a designated terrorist organisation

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/americas/16845-us-confirms-that-brotherhood-is-not-a-designated-terrorist-organisation


The United States government has confirmed that the Muslim Brotherhood has not been designated as a "terrorist organisation" by the state department.
Spokeswoman Marie Harf was referred to a statement on the movement's official website apparently calling for jihad. When asked if it would change the way that the US is dealing with the Islamic movement she pointed out that surfing the Brotherhood's website "is not usually part of [her] morning reading [but] we engage with a variety of parties in Egypt... The Muslim Brotherhood is not designated as a terrorist organisation by the United States."
She noted that she was updated about the issue and said: "I think it was attributed to the Revolutionary Punishment Group. And the message contained in the video is certainly disturbing in light of last week's attacks in the Sinai."
The government, Harf added, is seeking more information about the jihad statement. "We would condemn any call for violence, and do not have more to say than that."

Friday, 6 February 2015

Opinion: The False Light at the End of the Western Manufactured Tunnel for Muslims in Egypt


It was always inevitable that the Muslim Brotherhood had to be incorporated into Egyptian politics in some form or another due to their clout and prominence among many Egyptians, as well as their loose links with other off-shoots around the region. The West orchestrated a cunning maneuver that saw the 'Gradualist' Muslim Brotherhood self-immolate from the arena of politics by handing over the baton while regulating the rules themselves. The Muslim Brotherhood, led by shortsighted and unqualified Dr Mohammad Morsi, sent Egypt into a rapid decline leaving the population exasperated and unable to fulfill basic needs of the Egyptians.

It was Morsi who actuated the 'New Suez Canal' project that would see Egypt's revenues jump from $5bn to $12.5bn, but without the blessing of their 'master', America, Morsi was left empty handed when the institutions, such as the armed forces that were not in the dominion of Morsi, stalled progress of the project on the grounds that it threatened 'national security'. 

There were 300 alleged reports on attacks on Egypt's energy infrastructure, as well as the battle for Sinai that cut off lucrative links to Israel and Jordan which in turn crippled Morsi's attempt to provide Egyptians with consistent power. It begs the question, why do the puppets of the West such as Saudi, Kuwait and UAE decide to suddenly release the chokehold that the West had on Egypt? Their pledge of $10bn ahead of an investment conference in March comes at a time where the tarnished and degraded Muslim Brotherhood are being groomed to return to the political stage, albeit in a diluted and secular form. In addition to newly crowned King of Saudi Arabia, King Salman, who is sympathetic towards Brotherhood with close officials to the government stating it is  'better to communicate' as 'an ideology cannot be removed by force'.

Why is it that Egypt is managing to secure massive lucrative deals with energy giants such as BP, Total and Shell? Would such major corporations that are directly linked to overall Western global initiatives knowingly take a risk in investing in a country struggling to get a grip of both its economy and so called 'terrorism' which we know is only perpetuated by the West themselves.

Why is it now that the 'New Suez Canal' can finally continue with an expected date of 2019 pushed forward to 2016 by the desperate al-Sisi? 

With what assurances can the oil minister Sherif Ismael claim that the energy crisis in Egypt will be overcome in 5 years with shale gas exploration? When we know there is only one current leader in shale gas industry and that is the current world superpower that dictates the economic climate of the Middle East.

These facts lead us to believe that the West are indeed toying with the idea of a coalition in Egypt whereby all warring factions can be a part of the solution bringing stability to the region and leaving the Egyptians with a false sense that the only solution can be participatory democracy and that Allah (swt) and His Messenger (saw) have no say in the realm of life.

Monday, 2 February 2015

Egypt preparing to deliver basic needs ahead of a unity government including the Islamists?

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/africa/16729-egypt-to-import-natural-gas-directly-from-noble-energy


Ahead of recent reports that the current regime in Egypt (headed by al-Sisi and controlled by the US) are trying to incorporate the Muslim Brotherhood into the political framework, there are now trade and infrastructure deals going through that will lift the burden off the Egyptians. It is interesting to note the timing of such deals that bring normality back to the lives of many, giving  them a sense of relief and acceptance that any new change in government is a good change - even if it is a drastic compromise from an already compromised political party (Muslim Brotherhood).


From source:

A senior official from Egypt's natural gas holding company, EGAS, said on Sunday that Egypt plans to import Israeli natural gas directly from American oil firm, Noble Energy without the mediation of companies in Egypt or abroad, Anadolu news agency reported.

The Egyptian judiciary accused Salem, who is currently in Spain, of taking advantage of his partnership with the Eastern Mediterranean Gas Company, which exported Egyptian gas to Israel in 2008. He was acquitted of the charges last month.
A collective including British energy company B.G. Group, Spanish gas and electricity giant Unión Fenosa, and Egyptian investors led by businessman Alaa Arafa, signed a memorandum of understanding with Noble Energy to supply natural gas for the domestic market. The agreements are currently awaiting the formal approval of the Egyptian government.
Egypt suffers from frequent power cuts around the year due to shortages in natural gas.

Thursday, 22 January 2015

Offering Muslim Brotherhood's moderate leaders political positions

Source: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/blogs/politics/16493-egypts-coup-regime-tries-to-reconcile-with-the-muslim-brotherhood

Key points:

Informed sources within the Muslim Brotherhood claim that the Egyptian regime has sought ways and means to reconcile with the movement ever since the coup in July 2013. The Brotherhood, it is said, has rejected all such overtures.
Speaking to Arabi21, the sources explained that the discussions that took place between regime officials and some Brotherhood leaders, at times directly and on other occasions via mediators, focused on the acquiescence of the movement and its acceptance of the coup as a fact. In exchange, prisoners would be released and Brotherhood officials could play a political role in Egypt.
The regime has, since the coup, been keen to keep a number of Brotherhood leaders known to be moderate and inclined towards negotiating out of prison in the hope of reaching a political solution to the crisis. These leaders included Doctors Muhammad Ali Bishr, Amr Darraj and Yassir Ali.

With the Brotherhood refusing to move, the regime started to harass these three senior members of the movement to put pressure on it to make concessions. Consequently, Yassir Ali was detained and Darraj was threatened with detention, prompting him to leave Egypt and live in exile; he continues to play a more open and liberated political role. When the movement insisted on taking part in the 28 November rallies, which were called for by the Salafi Front, the regime detained Bishr.
The regime has released a number of Brotherhood leaders who are known for their moderation. The first to be released was former MP Ali Fatehilbab, the head of the parliamentary bloc of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) within the Shura Council. Upon his release in April last year, he announced an initiative for reconciliation between the Brotherhood and the government. However, this was rejected widely within the movement to such an extent that Fatehilbab was attacked and accused of letting it down.
This was followed in August 2014 by the release of Dr Hilmi Al-Jazzar, the Secretary General of the FJP in Giza, on medical grounds. This was a surprising move by a regime which quite deliberately allows scores of very sick prisoners to die in detention due to the lack of adequate medical care.
The release of Al-Jazzar provoked speculation that he might play a role in reconciling the Brotherhood with the government. Yet, this too was rejected by the overwhelming majority of the movement's members, especially the youth. Once again, the potential go-between was attacked and warned against compromising the rights of the martyrs. Al-Jazzar made a public statement in which he affirmed clearly, according to Brotherhood sources, that he refused to play any political role at this stage. He insisted that he was not authorised to speak in the name of the movement and has since disappeared from the political scene.
An important role for Yassir Ali
The third Brotherhood leader to be released was the aforementioned Dr Yassir Ali, the former spokesman for President Mohamed Morsi. Ali was released suddenly in November last year after spending 11 months in prison. Speculation was rife about a possible reconciliation role for him.
The Brotherhood sources have explained that Ali was detained in early 2014 after a meeting with the Saudi ambassador in Cairo during which he was handed a proposal for reconciliation between the Egyptian government and the Muslim Brotherhood. According to the Saudi proposal the regime would release the detainees and allow the movement back into political life in exchange for giving up the demand for Morsi to return. Apparently, Ali was detained only hours after the meeting because it took place without the prior knowledge of the regime.
With the removal of both Darraj and Bishr from the scene, the regime focused on Ali as a contact within the Brotherhood. It is alleged that there have been several meetings between him and security officials and political mediators.
The first was several weeks ago when Ali was invited to attend the wedding of a relative of an army general. He was told that a number of Military Council members would be there and that they would like to speak to him about the current situation. However, following consultation with the Brotherhood leadership, he turned the invitation down.
Afterwards, Ali received an explicit invitation to meet the Director of National Security, Brigadier General Khalid Tharwat, to discuss the possibility of a period of calm in exchange for releasing the detainees. When Ali reiterated the refusal of the movement to make any concessions, he was taken aback by the Minister of Interior, who stormed into the meeting. It was clear that the minister had been eavesdropping. He told Ali that the regime wanted to resolve the crisis and reach a solution that would be acceptable to both sides. However, Ali stressed that he was unable to persuade the Brotherhood, whether members or leaders, of giving up on the demands for which thousands had paid with their lives. The minister's face changed colour and he threatened Ali with further detention. "Don't leave Cairo or else you will be detained and thrown in jail," he is alleged to have warned.
The last attempt to reach an agreement over a period of calm was made three weeks ago when Muhammad Hasanayn Haykal contacted Yassir Ali for a meeting. The veteran journalist and writer asked Ali to convince the Brotherhood to end the demonstrations and join the political process; he pledged that the regime would, in exchange, open a new chapter with the movement.
Once again, Ali stressed that continuing the revolution and keeping the rallies going was no longer the decision of the Brotherhood alone. He added that it was not even the decision of the Alliance for Supporting Legitimacy, but had become something that the people of Egypt must decide.
Calm prior to the economic conference
The sources have said that one of the reasons for the intransigence of the Brotherhood is the objection by the group to the manner in which the regime decides who it wants to deal with. It selects certain individuals who it feels should represent the movement and imposes this choice on the group instead of dealing with whoever the Brotherhood itself has decided is fit for that purpose.
They also noted that Al-Sisi is trying by all means to bring about a measure of calm across the country prior to the economic conference that is to be held in Sharm Al-Sheikh in March. This is a last resort to try to rescue the failing Egyptian economy, especially now that aid from the Gulf has become "extremely meagre".
Last week a court cleared Dr Yassir Ali of the charge of hiding information about former Prime Minister Dr Hisham Qandil and annulled a previous six-month jail sentence.
However, although the sources confirmed the release of President Morsi's advisor, Khalid Al-Qazzaz, last week, they stress that this has nothing to do with the reconciliation issue. They explained that Al-Qazzaz, who had been in detention since July 2013, was released as a result of diplomatic pressure from the Canadian embassy. Al-Qazzaz is expected to leave for Canada soon to join his family there.