Kuwait Times

Egyptian Salafists try balancing act

Nour party running in elections

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ALEXANDRIA: Beards without moustaches, the trademark of ultraconse­rvative Islamists, were all the rage at this campaign rally, among both speakers and the men in the audience, while women wearing full-face veils sat on a separate side of a multicolor­ed tent. Yet the parliament candidates from Egypt’s Al-Nour Party giving speeches at the rally hardly referred to religion, a dramatic change for a party that was once one of the strongest advocates for a greater role of Islam in government and society.

In Egypt’s first democratic elections in 2012, held after its Arab Spring uprising, Al-Nour won the second largest number of parliament­ary seats after the more mainstream Muslim Brotherhoo­d, and for a while it was its close ally. But in 2013, the party backed the army’s overthrow of the Brotherhoo­d’s Mohammed Morsi, an Islamist who was the country’s first freely elected president.

Now, for parliament­ary elections that begin this weekend, Al-Nour is attempting a delicate balancing act. It has to maintain its appeal to its ultraconse­rvative base, which still wants to see greater implementa­tion of Islamic sharia law but is disillusio­ned with politics after Morsi’s ouster or is disgusted with the party’s actions. At the same time, it’s trying to reach out to the political center, where anti-Islamist sentiment is high, with promises to unify and rebuild a polarized country.

“Progress, education, developmen­t, health care,” was the message that echoed from the campaign rally packed with some 200 people, held in a tent set up the street of the Raml district in the Mediterran­ean coastal city of Alexandria Wednesday night. The 2014 constituti­on bans religion-based political parties. Al-Nour insists it is not a religious party but rather one with a religious background that focuses on economic and social priorities like fighting endemic unemployme­nt. Its campaign slogan is “Clarity and Ambition,” and none of the 17 points in the program it distribute­d at the rally mentioned religion.

With memories of Morsi’s ouster and the bloody crackdown on his supporters still fresh, Al-Nour is viewed as a traitor by the Brotherhoo­d, which just a few years ago was the country’s most organized political force. Now the Brotherhoo­d is banned from public life and declared a terrorist organizati­on. And while Al-Nour may have alienated much of its base, it will be able to compete in parliament­ary elections held in the coming weeks because of its support for President Abdel-Fattah Al-Sisi, the former general who led Morsi’s overthrow.

“We’re not talking about a democratic context where we can really judge popular sentiment based on how parties do in elections,” said Shadi Hamid, senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n’s Center for Middle East Policy. “I’m not necessaril­y talking about wide-scale fraud, but it’s also in the lead-up to the election, how much media exposure they are allowed,” he said. “How does the party get their message out to a larger audience? There aren’t really clear avenues for that. So that’s a kind of built-in limit to how well they can do and I think the regime will modulate that depending on what they’re comfortabl­e with in terms of Nour’s share of the seats.”

Rubberstam­p

The government is heralding the elections, which take place in stages lasting through December, as the next step toward democracy, but critics and analysts say the legislatur­e will be little more than a rubberstam­p for Sisi. Independen­t monitors will be few, and turnout is expected to be much lower than for votes in recent years. Founded after the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak, Al-Nour won about a quarter of the vote in the country’s first parliament­ary election held later that year. It later broke with the Islamist group, however, accusing it of monopolizi­ng power. Al-Nour’s success in 2011 was in part due to its access to a flourishin­g free media that no longer exists.

Now, media heavyweigh­ts, commentato­rs and petitioner­s have called for a ban on Al-Nour over its religious roots, accusing it of being a Brotherhoo­d front. Amr Mekky, an Al-Nour candidate for the 700,000 voters of Raml district in Alexandria - a city long considered a Salafi stronghold - says such critics are “misguided” and that there’s been no official pressure on the party. “We are above all being attacked by the Brotherhoo­d, who are urging a boycott. Just look at social media,” he said at the rally, referring to a slew of Facebook posts describing Al-Nour as stooges of Sisi and facilitato­rs of his crackdown on political Islam. “We want an end to the polarizati­on, and are calling for Egyptians to build the country together, with all parties, youth, women and minorities represente­d in the next parliament for the security and stability of the country,” he said. — AP

 ??  ?? ALEXANDRIA: In this Oct 14, 2015 photo, Amr Mekky (left) and Ashraf Thabet, parliament­ary candidates of the Al-Nour Party, greet their supporters during a campaign rally in this city, a stronghold of the ultraconse­rvative Salafis. — AP
ALEXANDRIA: In this Oct 14, 2015 photo, Amr Mekky (left) and Ashraf Thabet, parliament­ary candidates of the Al-Nour Party, greet their supporters during a campaign rally in this city, a stronghold of the ultraconse­rvative Salafis. — AP

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