Latest News:  

English>>World

News Analysis: Registration of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood as NGO trick to avoid judicial challenges

By Mahmoud Fouly (Xinhua)

08:14, March 22, 2013

CAIRO, March 21 (Xinhua) -- The registration of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood (MB) group as a legal civil society body is seen by many as "a trick" to avoid judicial challenges about its legal status and to quench opposition calls to dismantle the group.

"The MB registration as an NGO was just meant to circumvent the law," political expert Ammar Ali Hassan, head of the Middle East Center for Political Studies, said. He described the group's move as "more like a political propaganda rather than a proper legal action."

Egypt's State Commissioners Authority, a judicial body with the Supreme Administrative Court, issued a report Wednesday, recommending the court to dismantle the MB, arguing "its presence has no legal basis." However, on Thursday, Insurance and Social Affairs Minister Nagwa Khalil said the MB was already registered as a civil society organization on Tuesday after the group had submitted a legal request approved by the ministry.

"The law regulating NGOs does not allow exercising political work. I do not think the MB will be committed to this rule as an NGO," Hassan said, expressing his belief that the group's Freedom and Justice Party and the NGO were just legal covers to justify their too many headquarters across the country.

Hassan rhetorically wondered if the MB would dismantle its consultation offices as a group and form a board as an NGO, and if its chief Mohamed Badei would be named the NGO board director to suit the law.

For his part, Emad Eddin Hussein, editor-in-cheif of Shorouk newspaper, said the MB would not be satisfied as an NGO, wondering if it would subject its funds, which is said to have reached 60 billion U.S. dollars, to the law.

"The main challenge is that the group conforms with the law without circumventing it," Hussein said, arguing that the MB would not be restricted to social work as required by the law that prevents NGOs from engaging in politics.

Hussein said "the big problem" was that the MB would have to work as a society not as a group, wondering "what then will happen to the Brotherhood as a group and to its chief as the group leader? "

The political expert saw that the MB was just gaining some time by having a legal political party and a legal NGO until a new law is drafted to legalize the existence of the group as a real ( political) group.

The administrative court will rule on lawsuits demanding dissolution of the MB on March 26.

【1】 【2】


We recommend:

Animals enjoy sunshine in Hannover zoo, Germany

Mass marriage ceremony held in Karachi,Pakistan

Late winter snowstorm hits New York

Flood continues hitting Indonesia's Jakarta

Thousands march with coffin to pay tribute to Chavez

83rd Geneva Int'l Motor Show opens

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:LiangJun、Yao Chun)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Missile brigade conducts drill

  2. Malaysian security forces launch attack

  3. Thousand-Buddha Cliff in Lhasa

  4. Photo story:How real life is, how real love is!

  5. Yunnan fights against crayfish invasion

  6. Cute dolphins nursed and trained in HK

  7. Written-off vehicles-turned transformers

  8. Beckham in Beijing, playing football in suits

  9. Opinion: In Europe for Europe

  10. China's solar giant declares bankruptcy

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Richer parents, more fashionable children
  2. Hopes for Obama's trip
  3. Commentary: To pivot to Asia or peace?
  4. Lavish behavior punished
  5. Migration part of global development
  6. CCTV in hot water after corporate exposé backfires
  7. Cultural parks no substitute for talent
  8. Planning vital to diplomacy
  9. Loopholes for rich make estate tax meaningless
  10. How to start transformation and upgrading?

What’s happening in China

Rare tree blooms after 30 years

  1. Gov't funding for drug addicts HIV program
  2. China handles more IPR crimes in 2012
  3. BMW driver sentenced for obstructing police
  4. 'Old clerks' get new role showing rich how to shop
  5. Leftover men without means likely to stay single