Kekalahan Muslim Brotherhood di Yordania. 


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=104172&d=1&m=12&y=2007

            Saturday 1 December 2007 (21 Dhul Qa`dah 1428)


                  Jordan's Brotherhood Body Dissolved
                  Abdul Jalil Mustafa, Arab News
                 
                    
                  AMMAN, 1 December 2007 - The top decision-making body of 
Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood movement, the Shoura (Consultative) Council, has 
dissolved itself following the major setback the group suffered at the 
parliamentary elections on Nov. 20, a group spokesman said yesterday.

                  "The Council has decided to dissolve itself after two days of 
deliberations as a protest against the unprecedented rigging of the elections," 
the Muslim Brotherhood's Deputy Secretary-General Jamil Abu Bakr said. 

                  He expected a detailed statement to be issued shortly about 
the decision, which came in the wake of the echoing defeat the group suffered 
at the general elections.

                  The Islamic Action Front (IAF), the Brotherhood's political 
arm, fielded 22 candidates but won only six seats at the newly elected 
110-member lower house of Parliament, compared with 17 seats in the previous 
elections of 2003. The Islamists' defeat was blamed mainly on differences 
between moderates and hard-liners inside the group over the candidate's list, 
which reportedly comprised only elements supportive of reconciliation with the 
government.

                  Abu Bakr indicated that the dissolution of the Consultative 
Council would pave the ground for the election of a new leadership for the 
influential group. The Muslim Brotherhood also levied criticism against the 
government, saying the elections were rigged.

                  "The fraud and government interference in the electoral 
process resulted in the winning of other candidates at the expense of the 
Islamists," Abu Bakr, told reporters. The government has repeatedly denied the 
allegations.

                  "The Shoura Council, which made the decision to participate 
in the elections, felt responsible and decided to dissolve itself," Abu-Bakr 
added. 

                  The 51-member council made the decision during a meeting late 
Thursday. Abu-Bakr said the group would not withdraw its representatives from 
Parliament and would elect a new Shoura Council within the next six months.

                  Loyalists to Jordan's King Abdallah won a majority of seats 
in last week's elections. The IAF nearly won a majority in the legislature in 
1989, but its popularity has declined because it has failed to deliver on its 
promise to improve living conditions in cash-strapped Jordan, where poverty and 
unemployment are rampant.

                  Also Thursday, Abdallah appointed the 55 members of the upper 
house of Parliament, including Abdul-Majid Thneibat, a former head of the 
Brotherhood, local media reported. The new Senate also includes a record eight 
women, an attempt at increasing their political power. 

                  The king has historically included a small number of 
Islamists in the government as an attempt to co-opt the opposition, including 
Abdul Rahim Akour, a former deputy head of the IAF who has been a member of the 
Cabinet since 2000.
                 
           
     


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