Egypt's Salafist Muslims split over Sisi support

Source: 
Your Middle East
Publication date: 
May 17 2014

When Egypt's military chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi announced in a television address the overthrow of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, an ultraconservative Salafi party official sat by his side, making an unlikely ally.

Almost 11 months later, with Sisi poised to win a presidential election amid a crackdown on Islamists that has killed at least 1,400 people, the Salafists of Al-Nour party are sticking by him.

The support of Al-Nour, whose Galal al-Morra appeared in the dramatic television broadcast last July, has allowed it to survive the crackdown but splintered its base.

Many Salafists were among the estimated 700 protesters killed on August 14 when police raided a pro-Morsi protest camp in Cairo.

The leaders of Egypt's Salafists -- adherents of a puritanical school of Islam -- have had a history of falling in line with strongmen.

Their opponents, including the Muslim Brotherhood, say they are mere opportunists.

But the Salafi leaders argue their pragmatism helps avoid the turmoil and bloodshed of rebellion, and serves their endgame of a society which accepts Islamic law.

"We have a long-term vision," said Nader Bakkar, a spokesman for Al-Nour party.

The party was formed in 2011, months after an uprising overthrew Hosni Mubarak - an uprising Egypt's most prominent Salafi clerics viewed with caution.

Al-Nour won the second largest number of seats in a 2011 parliamentary election, behind the more politically experienced Brotherhood, and it lobbied for a larger role for Islamic law in a new constitution.

"We are for the implementation of Islamic law but not a state within a state," Bakkar said of Morsi's Brotherhood movement, removed from power after mass protests against Morsi.

"We want a parliamentary system, not a president who monopolises all powers," he said.

The party now faces the prospect of a retired military leader as president, who says he is pious but will leave religion out of politics.

A new constitution approved in a January referendum removed much of the Islamist-inspired wording of the one adopted under Morsi, and partly drafted by Salafists.

Bakkar says his party was backing Sisi in the May 26-27 election because he was the best man to restore "stability" and fight "terrorism", referring to militant attacks which have killed hundreds of security personnel.

The decision has shorn it of support from many Islamists ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for later this year.

 

Source/Fuente: http://www.yourmiddleeast.com/news/egypts-salafist-muslims-split-over-si...