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Africa North
Amr Moussa: Islamists wont take power in Egypt
2011-04-12
[Jerusalem Post Front Page] Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
chief Jerry Lewis doppelgänger Amr Moussa,
... who has been head of the Arab League since about the time Jerry and Dean split up ...
a leading contender to become Egypt's next president, said Islamists will not take power in the country but are bound to be a player on the political scene.

"Egypt will be a democratic state and will not regress," Moussa told newspaper al-Hayat in remarks published on Monday.

"There will be an Islamic element -- or an element based on an Islamic reference, as the constitution says -- in Egypt's political body," he said.

Moussa, 74, said his age meant he would stand for only one term and had already drafted his campaign manifesto.

Secretary-General of the vaporous Arab League since 2001, Moussa declared his candidacy for the Egyptian presidency after a popular uprising toppled Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
from power on Feb. 11.

The country is now run by a military council which has promised free and fair parliamentary and presidential elections by the end of the year.

Mubarak's three decades of autocratic rule made it almost impossible for anyone to challenge the dominance of his National Democratic Party, which dealt crushing defeats to its rivals in elections that his critics say were rigged.

Egypt's public prosecutor is now investigating Mubarak as part of probes into the killing of prosecutors and embezzlement of public funds, although the ousted president says allegations against him are lies.

Moussa said Egypt needed a presidential, not parliamentary, system of government for the immediate future because political parties were still too weak.

"Party activity and interaction, and the building of strong political currents, need a period of time," he said. Egypt "should be a presidential state for the coming years in the absence of strong parties."

Asked whether he feared the rise of Islamists in Egypt, Moussa replied: "Lunatic groups are too weak to pounce on power, but the desire for leadership will remain."
Posted by:Fred

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