EGYPT
PM LABELS BROTHERHOOD 'TERRORIST' GROUP AFTER BOMB KILLS 14
CAIRO: Egypt's premier on Tuesday declared the
Muslim Brotherhood movement a “terrorist” group, after a car bomb ripped
through a police building and killed at least 14 people. Prime Minister Hazem Beblawi's condemnation of
the group comes just weeks ahead of a referendum on a new constitution that is
billed as the first major step toward democracy since the ouster of president
Mohamed Morsi in July.
“Prime Minister Beblawi has declared the Muslim
Brotherhood as a terrorist organization,” state news agency MENA quoted the
premier's spokesman Sherif Showky as saying. An Egyptian court has already banned the
activities of the Muslim Brotherhood, to which Morsi belongs, while the interim
military-installed authorities have often accused the group of funding and
training militants in the restive Sinai Peninsula.
Tuesday's move to declare the Brotherhood a
“terrorist” organisation will likely be seen as a further push by the interim
authorities to isolate the movement ahead of the constitutional referendum. The 85-year-old political and social movement
prevailed in a series of polls following the overthrow of longtime dictator
Hosni Mubarak in 2011, and Morsi became the country's first freely elected
leader after winning elections last year.
Beblawi's statement came just hours after a
powerful car bomb tore through a police headquarters in the Egyptian city of
Mansoura early Tuesday, killing at least 14 people, mostly policemen, said
medics and officials. Egyptian security sources said the explosion in
the city, north of Cairo, was massive and a part of the building had caved in. Medics said the bombing wounded more than 100
people. “The majority of the casualties are from the
police. The explosion was caused by a car bomb,” Omar al-Shawatsi, the governor
of Daqahleya, of which Mansoura is the capital, told state media.
The impact of the explosion was felt around 20
kilometres (12 miles) away and shattered windows of nearby buildings, the
security sources said. The head of security for Daqahleya, Sami
El-Mihi, was wounded in the blast and two of his aides were killed, security
sources said. There has been widespread bloodshed in Egypt
since Morsi's ouster.
He was forced from power on July 3 after
massive street protests against his turbulent one-year rule, with millions
accusing him of power-grabbing and economic mismanagement. More than 1,000 people have been killed in a
government crackdown on his supporters, mostly from the Brotherhood.
The crackdown has also seen thousands of
Islamists, including the entire leadership of the Brotherhood, arrested. The
movement's top leaders including its supreme guide, Mohamed Badie have
been put on trial. Morsi too is on trial over several charges including some
related to the deaths of protesters during his presidency.
Egyptian prosecutors and officials say the
Muslim Brotherhood has links with Islamist militants who have stepped up
attacks on security forces across the country. More than 100 members of the security forces
have been killed since Morsi's ouster. Egypt is deeply polarised since Morsi was
removed from power and in particular after security forces stormed two protest
camps of his supporters in Cairo on Aug 14.
Hundreds were killed in ensuing clashes at the
two camps, the worst carnage in Egypt's modern history. After Morsi was ousted, Egypt's
military-installed authorities announced a road map for a democratic
transition. On January 14 and 15 Egypt is holding a referendum on a new
constitution the first step in the plan. The constitution, if approved, will be followed
by parliamentary and presidential elections by mid-2014. Egypt drafted a new constitution after the
previous 2012 version was suspended when the military deposed Morsi.
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