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29 March 2024

ElBaradei returns to Egypt politics with new party

Published
By AP

Reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei launched a new political party on Saturday that he said aims to unite Egyptians and save the country's revolution from a messy democratic transition.

The Constitution Party marks a return to public life for ElBaradei, who declared in January that he would not run for president and that a fair vote would be impossible during a muddled transition period.

His pullout four months before the start of the presidential vote dealt a blow to the liberal and leftist groups who were behind the Jan. 25 uprising that forced Hosni Mubarak out of office last year. The groups, many of whom had found in ElBaradei a rallying figure for their calls for democracy in Egypt, had been badly defeated at the ballot box in the first parliamentary elections after Mubarak.

Islamist groups, including the powerful Muslim Brotherhood and the popular ultraconservative Salafi groups, emerged as the biggest winner in those elections, capturing nearly 70 percent of the seats.

The young activists were also subjected to an escalating crackdown by the country's rulers, including referral to military trials, arrests and media smear campaigns.

``The aim of this party is to save the great Jan. 25 revolution, which has been derailed, and is almost aborted and to restore our unity,'' ElBaradei told a crowd of supporters and journalists. ``When this revolution started we never imagined the conditions we are and the tragic transition we are living today.''

ElBaradei, who received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work as head of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency, said a new organized political group is necessary to unite Egyptians, and prepare the youth behind the uprising for a political future.

``We hope through this party...to start anew to build the country on the basis of democracy and justice,'' he said.

Fourteen months after Mubarak stepped down, the generals who took over are embroiled in a power struggle with the emerging Islamists. They dominate the parliament but complain the generals are obstructing them. Many of their rivals complain the Islamists are overreaching.

The presidential elections due to start on May 23 have been marred by the disqualification of 10 candidates, including three front-runners.

Supporters of one of the disqualified candidates, ultraconservative Salafi preacher Hazem Abu Ismail, have began a sit-in outside the Ministry of Defense overnight Saturday, demanding an end to military rule.

The process of writing a new constitution, which would set the authorities of the next president, has been obstructed by fighting among secular and Islamist groups over the makeup of the assembly that will write it.

ElBaradei said his party, which has not yet officially registered, aims to represent a moderate Egypt, and will be ready to work in two or three months.

ElBaradei has often been blamed by his supporters for being too aloof and for his low key approach to political action. His absence from street protests, his preference for quiet political negotiations, and his pullout from the race has also frustrated many.

The crowd during the launch of the party Saturday cheered him on.