Egypt police continue Muslim Brotherhood arrests ahead of local elections News
Egypt police continue Muslim Brotherhood arrests ahead of local elections

[JURIST] Egyptian police arrested 25 members of the opposition Muslim Brotherhood [party website; FAS backgrounder] Wednesday, following the arrest of 17 members on Tuesday. Muslim Brotherhood members believe the arrests targeted potential candidates for the upcoming April 8 provincial council elections [MB report]. Egypt's provincial councils administer local municipal government services. These municipal elections were originally scheduled for 2006, but the Egyptian legislature passed a law [JURIST report] to delay the elections for two years after the Muslim Brotherhood made a strong showing in the 2005 parliamentary elections. Last Wednesday, Egyptian police arrested 70 members, following the arrest of 51 members [JURIST reports] last Sunday. AP has more.

The Muslim Brotherhood is the largest opposition party in Egypt [JURIST news archive] and more than 600 of its members have been detained this year alone. Its members run officially as independents because the Muslim Brotherhood has been banned in Egypt since 1954. Human Rights Watch (HRW) [advocacy website] has criticized [press release] Egypt for repressing the group in a manner that "flouts fundamental human rights and freedoms." The Egyptian government accuses the organization of trying to create an Islamic theocracy through violence.

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