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Egypt’s former spy chief says not backed by army

Presidential candidate Egypt's former vice president Omar Suleiman (C), is mobbed by supporters while escorted by military police, as he presents recommendation documents to the Higher Presidential Elections Commission (HPEC) headquarters in Cairo April 8, 2012. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

CAIRO (Reuters) – Hosni Mubarak’s former intelligence chief said his bid for the presidency does not

have the support of Egypt’s military rulers and accused Islamists of sending him death threats, an Egyptian newspaper

reported on Monday.

Presidential candidate

Egypt's former vice president Omar Suleiman (C), is mobbed by supporters while escorted by military police, as he

presents recommendation documents to the Higher Presidential Elections Commission (HPEC) headquarters in Cairo April 8, 2012.

REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

Omar Suleiman, 74, announced his candidacy on Friday and showed he still

wields political clout by collecting around 72,000 signatures of eligible voters in one day, more than twice the 30,000

required. The deadline for submitting signatures was Sunday.

Suleiman’s military background suggested to many that he

had the backing of the ruling army council that took over from Mubarak in February last year.

“The supreme council has

no relation, neither negatively nor positively, with my decision to join the race for the presidency,” Suleiman said in an

interview published in the state’s Al-Akhbar newspaper on Monday.

“And indeed, as soon as my nomination for the

presidency was announced, I received on my personal mobile and through some people close to me death threats and messages

saying ‘we will take revenge’ from members of the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist groups,” he added.

Suleiman,

made vice president by Mubarak in the last days of his three-decade rule, symbolises that era’s tough security regime and

poses a threat to Islamists, who were routinely harassed and arrested during Mubarak’s era, and to liberals, who spearheaded

Mubarak’s ouster. But his candidacy might appeal to some Egyptians hoping for an end to political instability.

His

11th-hour decision to run for president came shortly after the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist movement long suppressed by

Mubarak and now in control of a parliament majority, broke a pledge not to field a candidate and nominated its deputy leader,

Khairat al-Shater, for head of state.

In an interview with Reuters on Sunday, Shater denounced Suleiman’s bid for his

former boss’s job.

“I consider his entry an insult to the revolution and the Egyptian people,” said Shater, who said

he spent 12 years in jail during the Mubarak era. “Omar Suleiman has made a big mistake. He will only win through forgery

and, if this happens, the revolution will kick off again.”

The support of the Brotherhood’s formidable campaign

machine makes Shater an immediate front-runner.

Members of the Brotherhood were not available to comment on

Suleiman’s accusation that he received death threats from them.

The military council has said it will hand power to

civilians after a presidential election due in May and June. Around 23 candidates qualified to run for head of state and most

of the top contenders are Islamists or Mubarak-era politicians.

Asked about Egyptians who view his nomination as an

attempt to reproduce the Mubarak regime they ousted, Suleiman said: “Let us say that you cannot turn back the clock. The

revolution has formed a new reality … and no one could ever revive a regime that has failed, ended, and was rejected by the

public.”

“And I have told the Egyptian youth and many others with whom I have met during the revolution period that I

am in favor of their legitimate demands,” he added.

If he were to win, Suleiman said he would not interfere in the

trials of any of the members of the former regime. Mubarak and some of his top officials are on trial for charges related to

the death of over 800 protesters during the uprising and for corruption. The final verdict in Mubarak’s case is due on June

2.

A BROTHERHOOD MONOPOLY

Suleiman said he was encouraged to run for the state’s top post because he felt the

Brotherhood’s popularity has fallen due to “their determination to monopolise all posts.”

The current constitution

that gave absolute powers to the president was suspended by the army shortly after the toppling of Mubarak.

Suleiman

said he could not accept the presidency if the constitutional committee decides to give more power to the parliament than the

president.

“I would never agree to be just an image. The head of state has to have real power, and I think that the

country is in need of a strong president who would bring stability and security.”

Like most of his rivals, Suleiman

vowed to bring security back to the streets, aid Egypt’s distressed economy, implement democracy and respect all

international treaties.

During the Egyptian uprising Suleiman had said in an interview with ABC that Egyptians were

not ready for democracy. His comments turned against him the millions of Egyptians who had campaigned for weeks for an end to

Mubarak’s rule.

“Egypt will always be and continue to be a national democratic state where its children enjoy full

rights,” Suleiman said in Monday’s interview.

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