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Egyptian Presidential Candidates Debate Religious Freedom, Role of Sharia |
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Written by Don Byrd
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Friday, 11 May 2012 |
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In the first ever televised presidential debate in Egypt, the 2 leading candidates, Amr Moussa (former foreign minister)
and Abdel Moneim Abul Fotouh (formerly of the Muslim Brotherhood), answered questions about the role of religion in government, their views on political parties based on religious identity, and about religious liberty generally (among, of course, many other issues). Here are some clips from The Guardian's comprehensive coverage.
5.04pm ET/10.04pm BST: Cat's out of the bag, Abul-Futouh admits he wants to implement Sharia law after Moussa faces him with it.
There
is a difference of opinion between "the principles of Sharia" being the
basis of legislation as stated in Article 2 of the constitution and the
"rulings of Sharia" which is the Sharia bylaws.
Moussa points out that Abul-Futouh wants to implement the rulings of Sharia and Abul-Futouh quips "of course".
...
6.36pm ET/11.36pm BST: The following question is about the status of the
Muslim Brotherhood, religious-based parties and civil liberties and
minority rights.
Abul-Futoh says that the Brotherhood has no
special status and will be treated as any other NGO. All must respect
the law and not work outside it. "I am against religious parties in the
sense that membership is reserved only for a certain religion," he says.
"As for parties that respect Islamic reference, that is in the
constitution. I am against the term 'minorities' – Copts are equal
citizens like all other Egyptians, there will be no discrimination."
Moussa
says: "The Muslim Brotherhood is no longer banned, but is still not yet
legal and can easily be classified as a legal body. I'm against
religious parties because discrimination is inherent in it. This causes
division amongst citizens."
The election is scheduled for May 23 and 24.
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