Egypt's Brotherhood will not bid for presidency
By Mariam Karouny
CAIRO (Reuters) - The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's biggest opposition group, will not attempt to challenge the ruling party in the 2011 presidential election under the existing constitution, its leader told Reuters in an interview.
The group is officially banned, forcing supporters to contest elections as independents. But the hurdles set by the constitution make it virtually impossible for any independent to run for president against the candidate backed by President Hosni Mubarak's party.
Brotherhood leader Mohamed Mahdi Akef told Reuters this week that his movement, which seeks to establish an Islamic state by non-violent means, would not make an electoral show of defiance.
"There are a lot of preparations that need to be addressed (before discussing) a presidential nomination, and at the forefront are freedom and a clean constitution," Akef said.
Reiterating the Brotherhood's position that it did not want open confrontation with the state, he said:
"I made my own calculations. Should I go by force and clash with the regime? I say no, we don't do that."
The Brotherhood, which renounced violence long ago, is seen as the only group able to muster hundreds of thousands of disciplined supporters against the government, but analysts say it fears sparking a crackdown that could crush it.
It controls about a fifth of the seats in parliament's lower house through supporters who ran in 2005 as independents. Continued...
