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Mubarak aide presidency bid an “insult”:

By Marwa Awad and AbdelRahman Youssef

CAIRO

(Reuters) – A bid for power by Hosni Mubarak’s former intelligence chief is an insult to Egypt’s revolution that, if

successful, would trigger a second nationwide revolt, the Muslim Brotherhood’s candidate for Egypt’s presidency

said.

Presidential candidate 

from the Muslim Brotherhood and the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), Khairat al-Shater gestures during an interview with 

Reuters at his office in Cairo April 8, 2012.  REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
Presidential candidate from the

Muslim Brotherhood and the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), Khairat al-Shater gestures during an interview with Reuters at

his office in Cairo April 8, 2012. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh

In his first public comments since being nominated by the Brotherhood on March 31, Khairat al-Shater

played down fears of a clash between the powerful Islamist movement and the army generals who have ruled Egypt since Mubarak

was ousted last year.

But he warned the Brotherhood would not back a $3.2 billion emergency IMF loan requested by the

army-backed government unless the terms are changed or the government steps down and lets a new administration oversee how

the funds are spent.

In an interview with Reuters on Sunday, the 61-year-old millionaire businessman denounced former

intelligence chief Omar Suleiman’s eleventh-hour decision to seek his former boss’s job. Mubarak made Suleiman vice

president just before losing power.

“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 military council, which took over from

Mubarak in February last year, has said it will hand power to civilians after a presidential election due to be held in May

and June. More than 20 candidates completed the formalities to run for head of state and the top contenders are all Islamists

or Mubarak-era politicians.

Support from the Brotherhood’s formidable campaign machine makes Shater an immediate

front-runner in the vote. Suleiman is a dark horse who proved he still wields political clout by quickly collecting the

30,000 signatures of eligible voters that he needed to run.

Violent protests and sectarian clashes have prolonged an

economic crisis since Mubarak’s overthrow but the streets have returned to relative calm after a parliamentary election as

the country’s political forces manoeuvre for influence and the army prepares to step aside.

 

The

Brotherhood, which built support for its project of an Islamic state through decades of preaching and charity work, was

suppressed by Mubarak but shifted to the centre-stage of politics after the January 2011 popular uprising begun by liberal

and left-wing revolutionaries.

It promised not to monopolize power in the style of Mubarak and his associates but its

Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) now has almost half the seats in parliament and dominates an assembly tasked with drawing up

a new constitution. Now it has reversed a pledge not to field a candidate for the presidency.

AVOID

CLASH

Shater, who stepped down as Brotherhood deputy leader to run for the presidency, said the decision was motivated

by fear that the army-backed government was failing to cooperate with the Brotherhood-dominated parliament and the movement

needed an executive post in case the assembly lacked teeth.

But he said a clash with the military – backbone of

national security – must be avoided.

“Even if there are issues with the military council’s handling of the

transitional period, such issues must be resolved in a way that does not lead to a real clash with the armed forces,” he

said. “We must, in fact, work to strengthen and develop the army.”

Egypt’s new government would exercise civilian

oversight over the armed forces’ budget and their business interests, said Shater.

The military makes substantial

profits from an extensive and tax-exempt business empire that ranges from real estate and heavy industry to home cleaning

services and gasoline stations.

“It is not just taxing the military that is an issue. There is the problem of

conscripts who are forced to work in army economic projects without payment. What about the land that the army controls for

free? All these issues will be addressed by the new government,” Shater added.

Should he reach the presidency, Shater

said he would seek to reform government institutions and society on the basis of Islamic teachings. “Our foremost aim is

achieving progress based on Islamic principles”.

Egypt’s military-appointed government began negotiating a loan with

the International Monetary Fund in January to help it avert a balance of payments crisis.

The IMF has said broad

political support in Egypt is a pre-requisite for the loan deal and the Brotherhood has yet to provide its backing. The

government now says the talks might not conclude before June.

“We told them (the government), you have two choices.

Either postpone this issue of borrowing and come up with any other way of dealing with it without our approval, or speed up

the formation of a government,” Shater said.

The Brotherhood could also accept a loan if the size of the initial

disbursement is reduced so that most of the funds are paid out after a new government takes power following the completion of

a presidential vote in June, he added.

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