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Surname reference in documents
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The ultraconservative Al-Nour Party is yet to announce its candidate of choice. Researcher of Islamic movements Abdel-Reheem Ali told DNE that Al- Shater's nomination will only affect the Islamist vote as liberals, leftists, and the revolutionary youth will never vote for him. "Al-Shater's candidacy
iro's already wildly careening political scene. • happy to admit that Iwas taken by surprise. What was the Brotherhood thinking? The nomination of Shater seems to have been a response to threats and opportunities a rapidly changing political arena, rather than the hatching of a long-term plan. But ma
s the President of Egypt? I've been studying Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood for many years, and have interviewed most of its senior leaders (including Shater) multiple times. And I'll admit that I was surprised. So were most other MB-watchers I follow. That's in large part because it contradicts what I h
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ict of Shubra al-Kheima, a Brotherhood stronghold, to hear what their candidate would do upon capturing the Egyptian presidency. The rally, one of Shater's first since announcing his candidacy, managed to be both tightly organized and raucous -- Muslim Brotherhood cadres of all ages drowned out the n
"Egyptian renaissance," which they joyfully unfurled on cue. Meanwhile, senior officials at the head table drank from coffee mugs emblazoned with Shater's rather imposing headshot. Shater's last name means "clever" in Arabic -- a fitting moniker for the self-made millionaire -- and one handmade sign
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s would seem rather long if one is to judge by the views of the Brotherhood's recently-named candidate to be president of Egypt, Khairat al Shater. Shater was, until his nomination, the deputy head of the Brotherhood and as such its chief operating officer. Among his responsibilities was the direction
lamic state which had endured for a 1000 years. Brotherhood organization and discipline had followed this model. But what of the "variables" which Shater did admit existed? Were there new circumstances which might require new methods and policies in pursuit of "Brotherhood work'?" Indeed there were a
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s cannot be appealed) and implied its head is in the military's pocket. A second source of extreme uncertainty is the election itself. Assuming al- Shater's candidacy and the balloting move forward, Egypt simply has no experience in competitive presidential campaigns, making it very hard to predict ho
of just how much the political landscape has changed since the days when the U.S. pinned its hopes on a Mubarak regime that imprisoned the likes of Shater, the Times reports that the Brotherhood's candidate is in regular contact with U.S. Ambassador Anne Paterson, and that U.S. officials have praised
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old men=at the top had been overdue retirement. But his popularity has waned as he=has become ever more closely identified with the Brotherhood. Mr Shater, a heavy-=et veteran of Mr Mubarak's prisons, is widely seen as more powerful than=the prime minister. The Brothers' chief foreign-affairs spokesman
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on commission disqualified many of the top candidates who had announced their intentions to run and the Brotherhood had been given the tip that el- Shater would be considered a definite reject. In a surprise shift, the more ideologically strict Salafists countered with the comparatively moderate Abdel

Muslim Brotherhood
OrganizationIslamist political organization

Terje Rod-Larsen
PersonNorwegian diplomat

Hosni Mubarak
PersonPresident of Egypt from 1981 to 2011

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Bashar al-Assad
PersonPresident of Syria from 2000 to 2024

Cairo
LocationCapital city of Egypt

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

Amr Moussa
PersonPolitician from Egypt

Benjamin Netanyahu
PersonPrime Minister of Israel (1996–1999; 2009–2021; since 2022)

Saddam Hussein
PersonIraqi president, army officer and Baathist politician (1937–2006)
Ahmed Shafiq
PersonPerson referenced in documents

Hillary Clinton
PersonAmerican politician and diplomat (born 1947)

Lebanon
LocationCountry in West Asia

Bahrain
LocationCountry in the Persian Gulf

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)

Tunisia
LocationCountry in North Africa
Courtney Wild
PersonAmerican victim/survivor of Jeffrey Epstein who led legal battle for victims' rights

Vietnam
LocationCountry in Southeast Asia