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The author responds to the Muslim Brotherhood’s vision on the relationship between politics and religion.
The declaration of the start of the Labor Union elections is seen by observers as a war whoop for a battle between members of the Muslim Brotherhood and pro-government candidates.
The Brotherhood has received intelligence information about a security plan to detain members of the group. The information resulted in the postponement of the election for new members of the guidance bureau.
‘Āmir points out that the Muslim Brotherhood is a dangerous group that seeks to reach power through armed clashes with authorities. He suggests resisting such groups by distributing books that disprove their ideas.
The author presents an overview of a reference book containing important statements of prominent leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood on political and social issues.
The author thinks that there is an undeclared alliance between the Brotherhood and communists, which have been opposed to one another since the establishment of the Brotherhood. The two groups have announced that it is an attempt to unite public demand for political and economic reform.
An official Muslim Brotherhood spokesman has questioned the performance of the Ministry of Information in airing the parliamentary sessions and raises doubts about a deliberate blackout.
In an unprecedented move, the Brotherhood MPs have submitted a counter-report refuting an official report presented by the government.
Part of a series of interviews with Talāl al-Ansārī, a former Islamist terrorist who was a member of a violent Islamist group in the 1970s and who served a 20-year term in jail.
After the Muslim Brotherhood secured 88 seats in the Egyptian parliament, the authorities arrested a number of its members, marking what the author termed as “the end of honeymoon between the cabinet and the group.”

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