Tuesday, December 3, 2024 - 18:16 pm CET
Email Email | Print Print | rss RSS | comments icon Comment |   font decrease font increase

   


Email Email | Print Print

post divider

Sat, February 5, 2011 | Eurasia Review | By the Green Voice of Freedom

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei next to a portrait of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini who emerged as the leader of the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood Rejects Khamenei Calls for Iran-style Islamic State

Egypt’s main opposition party, the Muslim Brotherhood, have rejected calls by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei for an Islamic Revolution similar to the Iranian revolution of 1979 to be established in Egypt.

“The MB regards the revolution as the Egyptian People’s Revolution not an Islamic Revolution” said a statement published on the Muslim Brotherhood’s official website just hours after Khamenei’s remarks on Friday, while “asserting that the Egyptian People’s Revolution includes Muslims, Christians, from all sects and political.”

Ikhwanweb, the Muslim Brotherhood’s official English website editor in chief Khaled Hamza has stated that the current uprising in Egypt is a revolution of the Egyptian people and is by no means linked to any Islamic tendencies, despite allegations nor can it be described as Islamic.

Hamza stressed that the revolution is peaceful and calls solely for reform and a democratic civil state initiated by the youth through the social networking service Facebook and is far removed from any Islamist groups.

He criticized allegations and reiterations by some countries that the uprising was Islamic and denounced claims by the Iranian Supreme Leader Mr. Khamenai that the protests are a sign of an Islamic Awakening inspired by the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran.

Hamza maintained that the Egyptian protests are not an ‘Islamic’ uprising, but a mass protest against an unjust, autocratic regime which includes Egyptians from all walks of life and all religions and sects.

On Friday and during Friday prayers in Tehran, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei quickly seized the opportunity to exploit the Egyptian uprising and called for an Islamic state to be installed in Egypt. Khamenei said that the recent wave of Arab revolts was an “earthquake” triggered by the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

“Do not back down until the implementation of a popular regime based on religion,” said Khamenei, during the televised address. “The clergy should play a role. For example, when people come out of mosques and chant slogans, they should support. Inshallah (God willing) part of the Egyptian army will join the people. The main enemy of the Egyptian army is the Zionist regime and not the people.”

“Today’s events in North Africa, Egypt and Tunisia and some other countries have different meanings for us,” Khamenei said to worshipers. “This is what was always talked about as the occurrence of Islamic awakening at the time of the Islamic revolution of the great Iranian nation and is showing itself today,” he continued.

“Our revolution has been able to be inspiring and a model because of perseverance, stability and its insistence on principles.”

“Today in Egypt one can hear your voice echoing there. The American president who was in power during the (Iranian) revolution has said in an interview that what you hear in Egypt is familiar. What is heard in Cairo today was heard in Tehran during his days,” Khamenei said referring to former US President Jimmy Carter’s who presidency coincided with the Iranian revolution.

The recent response by the Muslim Brotherhood will undoubtedly irritate many in Tehran who have tried hard in recent weeks to present the Arab masses as a sign of a thirst for another Iranian-style Islamic Republic.

In recent days, the leaders of Iran’s opposition Green Movement Mir Hossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard have expressed their strong backing for the pro-democracy movements in the Arab world, including those of Egypt and Tunisia. The reformist 2009 presidential candidate stated that the “interests behind the governing ideologies does not allow for the truth to appear as it is.” He maintained that Egypt’s “Friday of Rage” was the result of the actions of “Egypt’s Pharaoh” including his arrest of dissidents, forced confessions, incompetence, corruption at the highest level, the squandering of public funds and resorting to executions to “instil fear among the people.”

“If the establishment had respected the people’s right to govern their own destiny and had not stolen the people’s votes during the elections in Egypt a few months ago, the dear people of Egypt would not have been chanting cries about the ‘downfall of the regime’,” Mousavi added. “Pharaohs usually hear the people when it’s too late.”

“Our nation values the great revolution of the brave people of Tunisia, and the righteous uprisings of the people of Egypt, Yemen and other countries in the region. We salute all the brave, wise and fighting people of Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia, Jordan and Yemen,” Mousavi continued, while expressing hope that the peoples of the region would be victorious in their struggle.


2 Comments to “Egypt: Muslim Brotherhood Rejects Khamenei Calls for Iran-style Islamic State”

  1. #Egypt: #MuslimBrotherhood Rejects #Khamenei Calls for #Iran-Style Islamic State | #Jan25 http://j.mp/gnUYLM

  2. avatar Elisabeth says:

    RT @CrethiPlethi: #Egypt: #MuslimBrotherhood Rejects #Khamenei Calls for #Iran-Style Islamic State | #Jan25 http://j.mp/gnUYLM


avatar

Quotes and Sayings

About the Region, Islam and cultural totalitarianism...

    The trouble with Islam is deeply rooted in its teachings. Islam is not only a religion. Islam (is) also a political ideology that preaches violence and applies its agenda by force.

    — Wafa Sultan, cited in N. C. Munson, Noel Carroll. If You Can Keep It, Allen-Ayers Books, 2010, p. 215

Weather Forecast

Middle East region weather forecast...

CRETHIPLETHI.COM - ONLINE MAGAZINE COVERING the MIDDLE EAST, ISRAEL, the ARAB WORLD, SOUTHWEST ASIA and the ISLAMIC MAGHREB - since 2009