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Egypt's Mubarak Could Face Death Penalty, Minister Says

Mubarak Death Penalty

MAGGIE MICHAEL   04/30/11 03:55 PM ET   AP

CAIRO — The once outlawed Muslim Brotherhood said Saturday its new political party will contest half of the seats in Egypt's parliamentary elections in September, revealing plans to become a major force in the country's post-revolution politics.

Egypt's largest Islamic group and the best organized opposition movement during ousted President Hosni Mubarak's three decades of autocratic rule sought to ease concerns that it is intent on bringing about an Islamist-dominated parliament.

"This is not a religious party, not a theocratic party," its newly named leader, Mahmoud Mosri, told reporters Saturday. He described the platform of his Freedom and Justice party as civil but with an Islamic background that adheres to the constitution.

The popular uprising that toppled Mubarak on Feb. 11 was driven by broad swaths of Egyptian society, and secular-minded youth activists, in particular, watched with concern as Brotherhood supporters joined the revolution once it was clear it had momentum.

They fear it will forge alliances with other Islamic groups, like ultraconservative Salafists, to dominate parliament and impose Islamic Sharia law in all aspects of life, limiting freedom of expression and dubbing their opponents infidels.

The new party will test to what extent the Brotherhood is willing to moderate its rigid religious discourse to try to win broader political support.

It is well positioned to win big in September's elections. Having survived years of attempts by Mubarak's regime to suppress it, the Brotherhood is the best organized political force in the country now that the ex-president's ruling party has been disbanded.

The activists behind the uprising have yet to catch up and fear they will not be ready by September to rally large numbers of voters.

Mindful of the unease, the Brotherhood has adopted the motto "Partnership, not supremacy" and its leaders are careful to use inclusive political language when talking about Egypt's post-Mubarak future. The group has also pledged not to field a candidate in November's presidential election.

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"We are facing a critical challenge to transform from pharaonic rule to people's rule, with a free parliament and elected Cabinet," leading Brotherhood member Essam el-Arian said.

However, the goal of winning half of parliament's 508 elected seats was unexpected after an earlier pledge by leaders to contest just a third of the seats.

Brotherhood leaders told Saturday's news conference at the group's new headquarters that the political party will be separate and independent from the religious group.

The party's caucus will be open to Muslims, Christians and women, said another Brotherhood politician, Mohammed Saad el-Katatni. Brotherhood members, however, are barred from joining any other party.

In past parliamentary elections, the Brotherhood successively fielded candidates as independents despite being officially outlawed.

Ammar Ali Hassan, an expert in Islamic movements, said the Brotherhood is facing a dilemma since it will have to function through legitimate channels for the first time in decades.

Other factors have shifted.

Under Mubarak's rule, Hassan said, turnout was dismally low due to widespread vote-rigging and fraud. And some of those who voted for Brotherhood candidates were driven by their resentment of Mubarak's ruling party, not necessarily genuine support for the group, he said.

"The Brotherhood fed off both the apathy and the resentment. These two elements served the group's interest and now both don't exist," he said.

Besides its transition to democracy, Egypt is also trying to reckon with its past under Mubarak's rule. The former president and his sons are in custody and are being questioned over corruption allegations and the killings of at least 846 protesters in the crackdown.

Egypt's new justice minister said Mubarak might face the death penalty if convicted of ordering the shooting of protesters, a newspaper reported Saturday.

Mohammed el-Guindi was quoted by the daily Al-Ahram as saying that the key to the case is whether former Interior Minister Habib el-Adly, also under investigation, would testify that Mubarak had given the order to open fire on protesters.

Mubarak, 82, is in custody at a hospital in the resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh where he was taken earlier this month for heart problems.

The minister also accused Mubarak of engendering a culture of corruption in the government, and he said the former president's wealth came from gas exports to Israel through a company owned by a personal friend and from arms deals, the paper reported.

Suzanne Mubarak, the ex-president's wife, will also be investigated and her questioning will start within days, the minister was quoted as saying.

Mubarak's wife, who was involved in a number of high-profile charitable ventures, is suspected of illegally amassing wealth through her non-governmental organizations.

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CAIRO — The once outlawed Muslim Brotherhood said Saturday its new political party will contest half of the seats in Egypt's parliamentary elections in September, revealing plans to become a maj...
CAIRO — The once outlawed Muslim Brotherhood said Saturday its new political party will contest half of the seats in Egypt's parliamentary elections in September, revealing plans to become a maj...
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24 hours ago (1:08 AM)
Kill. Kill. Kill. When is this going to stop? What has Mubarak done to deserve the death penalty?
21 hours ago (4:07 AM)
For those who believe in the death penalty, as the article states, he may have directly ordered the killing of protesters­. He's also responsibl­e for killings committed by his security forces over the years he's been in power.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CubnKira
10:10 PM on 5/01/2011
From a favorite ally whom Obama lauded in his first foreign policy speech in Cairo, to someone who may be on death row. Way to go Obama. The Muslim Brotherhoo­d will curtail freedom esp. for women and Coptic Christians­, not expand them. Yet, Assad, a strong supporter of Hezbollah and Hamas and worldwide terror who kills his protesters in the streets, is under Obama's radar.
08:31 PM on 5/01/2011
Death Penalty for what? Being a better ruler than the new "Regime"? Given the present mideast, the Mayan Calender may have some validity
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Abraxas79
07:05 PM on 5/01/2011
Good Lord, I hope we don't see another grainy cell phone video of Muburak being led to the gallows they way we did with Saddam.
04:58 PM on 5/01/2011
Let us hope he is given a trial rather than the "Romanian treatment"­.
04:10 PM on 5/01/2011
Mubarak should have left the damn country! I don't feel sorry for him. He had a chance to leave and he didn't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CubnKira
10:12 PM on 5/01/2011
Why because a few thousand protesters in a country of 40 million and Obama told him to leave? What gives Obama the right to pick other countries rulers and regime change?

Glenn Beck had well over 100,000 protesting the policies of Obama. Does that mean foreign countries can tell Obama to leave?
21 hours ago (4:10 AM)
Glenn Beck is president of another country?
03:52 PM on 5/01/2011
I fear for the life of Mubarak, but only 1/10 so much as other leaders in the Middle East. Principly, President Imanutjob of Iran, has crossed the line, with respect to his comments regarding Israel. Can there be any redemption (upon this earth), for a man who openly threatens to commit genocide?
04:58 PM on 5/01/2011
Yes, especially when he said, rather than actually conducted, the act.
09:52 PM on 5/01/2011
Who is openly threatenin­g to commit genocide?
03:01 PM on 5/01/2011
This is typical Moslem extremism. Mubarak hasn't done anything I wouldn't do. In fact he has done so much to Egypt why on earth would these people even think of applying the death penalty.
shalom
dr.k.
03:16 PM on 5/01/2011
So what! He came to power (viaNaser and via Sadat) through a military coup, rather than ever being a legitimate leader of egypt's people. He had his chance to flee, and now he is going to face the fate such dictators typically experience when they loose power.
05:28 PM on 5/01/2011
I honestly can't tell if you're being sarcastic or not.
06:43 PM on 5/01/2011
He's just being a typical Henry Kissinger.
03:01 PM on 5/01/2011
This article focuses more on the rise of muslim brotherhoo­d than the subject of Mubarak's pending death penalty, which gives some interestin­g background to the state of affairs there and why the US was so tenative to take a stance. However, that aside, if they kill Mubarak they will just be supporting the type of ancient laws that the people were protesting over, not that the US has any room to talk, we kill people here for lesser offenses, but I am hoping for peaceful justice, perhaps naively so.
02:21 PM on 5/01/2011
Considerin­g that Sharia Law wil soon be implemente­d in the new "democracy­" known a Egypt, who's surprized? After all, Homosexual­s will be put to death as well.

http://www­.trosch.or­g/moh/shar­ia-law.htm­l
02:50 PM on 5/01/2011
Dream on, much as you might wish it they won't be learning any lessons of murder in Egypt fro the born-again Christians who are huge backers and contributo­rs to Israel. The true connection between hatreds in the world is clear.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FACTISFACT
02:08 PM on 5/01/2011
Egypt has just overthrown a tyrant regime and is yet to switch over to Democratic system of rule nothing tangible can be expected now. At this moment to expect, a perfect foreign policy will be very unusual expectatio­n. First let it convert to democratic system and run it then automatica­lly it will learn what to do and where to go and who from to get advice.

As all countries have a leader so to the Muslim, countries have their leader and that is Saudi Arab. Therefore, for anything Saudi Arab may be consulted. Egypt has good relationsh­ip with all the Muslim countries in between Israel tried to ignite fire of animosity between Saudi Arab and Iran. As Israel had been always keeping the Mid-East unstable to remain close to US to utilize US as it's savior after wrong doings and used Egypt as its witness to prove that whatever it did was absolutely necessary. Egypt's relationsh­ip with US will always be good.

With regard to Muberaks conviction of death penalty, it would be all the mor better for the safety of Egypt itself. In addition, of course the things he had done over the long period to the country and to the citizens deserves to be hanged. However, it is a good sign that the person is getting a fair trial for impartial Judgement
01:54 PM on 5/01/2011
Muslim justice; you lose, you die.

Back to the 7th century.
09:56 PM on 5/01/2011
Nothing to do with "muslim justice".
21 hours ago (4:15 AM)
What do you think of the US's killing of Osama bin Laden?
11 hours ago (2:32 PM)
DELIGHTED!­!

What do YOU think?
01:29 PM on 5/01/2011
Why should we be alerted by the Islamist parties in the Middle-Eas­t? They have a majority of Muslims there so it's their citizens's rights to vote for anyone they like. We can not impose our kind of democracy or culture to them. If we don't see anything wrong wirh our over-sexua­lized culture and they don't see anything wrong with making people to dress appropriat­ely according to their cultures then we have to accept that they are different from us. The tit-for-ta­t fears of being too Christian-­leaning or too Muslim-lea­ning are only creating problems for the world. We are having enough problem here even with our Freedom of Religions when Christiani­ty being touted as the real-Ameri­canism by some as if our Founders who fled England against Protestant being the official religion of the government was not a clear enough sign that even Christiani­ty has different branches.
02:23 PM on 5/01/2011
Right. I mean, why have a stable and peaceful Egypt when you can have a violent and unpredicta­ble one that will atttack Isreal?
11:24 AM on 5/01/2011
Who can be called to testify on behalf of a defendant in a trial involving a former national leader? Certainly, they can issue internatio­nal subpoenas to force foreign officials to testify? Or even submit former classified correspond­ence with those officials? Read not only Obama and Israeli officials but also Bush era officials like Rice and Rumsfeld. Depending on what they want the testimony to be about, if it's issues of character or integrity of the defendant they will call upon officials most involved for the longest period of time with Mubarak - read Bush and Israel. Of course, prosecutor­s can introduce communicat­ions and request evidence from the same people but for different reasons to show culpabilit­y and collusion.
21 hours ago (4:20 AM)
A trial conducted using that approach would be interestin­g. But more likely it will be limited to a few localized issues such as Mubarak's role in the deaths of protesters­, and other political opponents during his reign.
17 hours ago (8:21 AM)
Him, his wife and his sons are also being charged with corruption matters. That might draw in well-known foreign figures given the reputed extent of his wealth and of course the political and economic figures he's been involved directly with over decades. Think of the recent blood diamond trial of Charles Taylor of Liberia, it could evolve like that.
11:04 AM on 5/01/2011
Some people are just obviously fearful of seeing heads roll abroad because they don't want to see them roll at home.

And the U.S. does have the death penalty, including of course for treasonabl­e offenses. Justice is never blind in this country when it comes to the powerful, but maybe the unpowerful ordinary people will finally get the message and not be so blind themselves much longer. That's what some people are worried about - they want it all to just magically go away. But the past never just goes away by sweeping it under a carpet. The dirt lingers till you deal with it.