Egypt Arrests 14 Members of Muslim Brotherhood
     
      By Cache Seel 
      Cairo
      20 May 2007  



The Egyptian Interior Ministry says police have arrested 14 members of the 
Muslim Brotherhood in a town 70 kilometers north of Cairo. Officials from the 
Muslim Brotherhood say the arrests are part of an attempt by the government to 
disrupt the organizations' efforts in the upcoming Shura Council elections. 
Cache Seel reports for VOA from Cairo.

     
      Egypt 

Egyptian authorities say 14 members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood group were 
arrested while holding a secret meeting at the home of a schoolteacher in the 
northern Sharqiya governorate. The Muslim Brotherhood says only 13 were 
arrested, and a statement posted on the group's website said the men were 
attending a course on making shampoo.

Although officially banned since 1954, the Muslim Brotherhood is Egypt's 
largest opposition party. It won almost 20 percent of the lower house of 
parliament, known as the People's Assembly, by running candidates as 
independents. 

Muslim Brotherhood Deputy Guide Mohamed Habib says the group will field 20 
candidates in the June elections for the upper house of parliament known as the 
Shura Council.

"We do not have a single member in the Shura Council," he said. "This means 
that our experience with Shura Council elections is bitter, saddening, and 
sorrowful because it has always misrepresented the will of the voters by 100 
percent."

Sunday is the registration deadline for candidates running in Shura Council 
elections, scheduled for June 11. Mohamed Habib says that 15 Muslim Brotherhood 
candidates have completed the registration process, while another five who have 
been blocked by the Interior Ministry are appealing to administrative courts. 

     
      Hala Mustafa 

Shura roughly translates into English as "consultative". The powers of the 
council are much more limited than the People's Assembly. Hala Mustafa is the 
editor of the Egyptian journal Democracy. 

"I think the issue of succession is more important than the Shura in itself, 
but since this council will stay until the next term of the presidential 
election I think that is why the conflict is more severe and crucial in the 
moment," said Hala Mustafa.

Mustafa says critics claim President Mubarak is planning to have his son Gamal 
succeed him, and that the government is cracking down on groups such as the 
Muslim Brotherhood to silence opposition to the move.

"Of course, because the new law and article 76 of the constitution that deals 
with presidential elections require 230 signatures from all of the 
representative houses," said Mustafa. "Of course the People's assembly and the 
Shura Council and also the local representative houses. That is why it is more 
important than any other council or any other election."

More than 300 members of the Muslim Brotherhood are held by the Egyptian 
government, many without being charged. Last week, the Supreme Administrative 
Court overturned a lower court's decision and is allowing the government to try 
40 members of the group in a closed session before a military tribunal. 

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