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Brotherhood plays down president's warning
Published in Daily News Egypt on 12 - 01 - 2007

CAIRO: The Muslim Brotherhood rebutted on Friday accusations by President Hosni Mubarak that the fundamentalist group poses a national security threat, saying his claims are aimed at stirring fears in the Egyptian public.
The President warned in an interview that the Muslim Brotherhood could threaten foreign investment and isolate Egypt from the world if it gained political ground.
The outlawed Brotherhood group is a danger to Egypt s security because of its religious discourse, Mubarak told the weekend edition of the independent Al-Osboa newspaper.
Many would take their money and run away from the country; investment would stop and unemployment would increase if the Brotherhood came to power, Mubarak warned.
Egypt would be totally isolated from the world, he said.
Though banned as a political party since 1954, the Brotherhood is the largest opposition group in Egypt, with 88 lawmakers sitting in parliament as independents.
The movement s deputy leader described Mubarak s warnings as fear-mongering geared at covering up to prepare for his son s succession.
It s a whole campaign of fear mongering to the public, aimed at marginalizing us, deputy Brotherhood leader Mohammed Habib said.
The Brotherhood s third top leader and more than 100 group members have been detained since December and Habib said the state crackdown was aimed at diverting attention from ongoing discussions in parliament to amend 34 articles of the constitution.
The Muslim group denies accusations it wants to establish a hard-line Islamic regime in Egypt.
When we talk about Islam, we don t talk about monopoly of clergymen or discriminating against the non-Muslims, but about a secular state on Islamic grounds, Habib said.
However, many critics, including Egypt s secular opposition groups, say the Brotherhood s agenda is ambivalent and fear the group s strict adherence to Islamic Sharia law could curb civil liberties.


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