Mubarak spy chief, Brothers spar on presidency

0
127

Egypt’s former spymaster Omar Suleiman lashed out at the Muslim Brotherhood and insisted his candidacy for the presidency would restore stability, as the two sides sparred Monday ahead of next month’s polls. The Brotherhood, which dominates parliament and is heavily tipped for the presidency, has “lost a lot of its popularity,” according to Suleiman, who was military intelligence chief under ousted president Hosni Mubarak. “There has been a change on the Egyptian street. The practises of the Brotherhood and their monopolistic ways and unacceptable pronouncements have contributed to the change in public opinion,” he said in an interview. Suleiman, a sworn enemy of Islamists before last year’s revolution which brought down Mubarak, vowed not to drop out of the May 23-24 election despite alleged threats from Islamists. “Ever since the announcement that I was running, I have received on my mobile and through friends threats and messages that ‘We will take our revenge’ from elements of the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist groups,” he said. “If some people think such threats will make me go back on his decision, they are mistaken,” said Suleiman. The former general played down his links with the ousted regime or with the military which has been ruling Egypt in the interim since Mubarak’s fall. “If I was intelligence chief and then vice president for a few days, that doesn’t mean I was part of a regime against which the people mounted a revolt,” he said. “The revolution has created a new reality and noone can bring back a regime which has fallen and which the population has rejected,” he said.