Muslim Brotherhood: We need Holy Democracy, and not Sharia. We are against Islamic state
10 February 2011
An Egyptian opposition movement, the Muslim 
Brotherhood, has stated that it seeks to promote Holy Democracy, but is not 
going to nominate its candidate for "presidential 
elections", Chicago Tribune wrote as quoted by the CNN.
"The Muslim Brotherhood does not seek power - Mohammed 
Mursi, a member of the group's media office, said at a Cairo news conference. We 
want to participate, not to dominate. We will not have a presidential candidate, 
we want to participate and help, we are not seeking power".
Another high-ranking representative of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Katatni, tried to allay fears that the movement seeks to establish Islamic law (Sharia) and a Caliphate in Egypt: "We reject the religious state", he said.
Opponents of the Muslim Brotherhood recently 
claimed that the movement did not believe in the equality of Muslims and 
Christian Copts, and in the equality of sexes. Some of them even speculated that 
"foreign militants" had taken part in the riots at Tahrir Square, Chicago 
Tribune said. 
Meanwhile, editor of the English-language website of the Egyptian organization, 
the Muslim Brotherhood, condemned the calls by the Mujahideen of Iraq for Jihad 
in Egypt and the establishment of the Sharia law. 
Editor of Ikhwanweb Khaled Hamza stated that the Muslim Brotherhood remained 
committed to non-violent methods and condemned any interference in the internal 
affairs of Egypt.
He stressed that the Egyptians could solve 
their own problems without anyone's intervention, including Al-Qaeda and similar 
groups, which "promote violence".
The Muslim Brotherhood is convinced that the Egyptians will ignore a recent 
statement by al-Qaeda, as well as its ideology, because it supposedly 
"contradicts the basic principles of Islam" and a peaceful nature of the 
Egyptian people. The Muslim Brotherhood did not say what principles of Islam 
they referred to. 
Hamza has confirmed that the current revolution in Egypt is a
"people's revolution" and not Islamic, and it 
involves representatives of all religions and their movements. Therefore, the 
Muslim Brotherhood acts as part of the people, who teamed up in the name of 
Sacred Western Freedom and Holy Democracy. 
Kavkaz Center
