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Woman bids to lead Egypt Islamist party

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In this Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Sabah al-Saqari, 49, a senior member of the Freedom and Justice Party, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood, arrives at her office in the FJP's headquarters in Cairo, Egypt. For the first time, a woman is running for the leadership of the political party of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egyptís most powerful Islamist group. Sabah al-Saqari says she wants to increase female participation in politics and even defends a womanís right to run for president, a stance her organization rejects. But liberals who fear Islamist rule will set back womenís rights say her candidacy is just an attempt by the Brotherhood to improve its image. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser) (Nasser Nasser (STF))

CAIRO – For the first time, a woman is running for the leadership of the political party of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s most powerful Islamist group. Sabah el-Saqari said she wants to increase female participation in politics and even defends a woman’s right to run for president, a stance her organization rejects.

But liberals who fear Islamist rule will set back women’s rights said her candidacy is just an attempt by the Brotherhood to improve its image.

A 22-year veteran of the Brotherhood, al-Saqari is running to become chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party, which the Brotherhood set up after the fall of autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak in February last year.

The party has become the vehicle through which the Brotherhood – banned and oppressed for decades under Mubarak – has rode to power, triumphing over the activists and progressive forces that led the revolution.

The internal party election, scheduled for Oct. 19, is to replace Mohammed Morsi, who held the chairman post until he took office in late June as Egypt’s first freely elected president.

Al-Saqari’s candidacy is largely symbolic. She is seen as having no chance to win in the face of two heavyweight candidates competing for the post – senior Brotherhood figures Essam el-Erian and Saad el-Katatni. A lesser known party member, Khaled Awda, is also running.

But the move is an unprecedented bid for a woman to enter the entirely male halls of power in the Brotherhood. The party did have female lawmakers in the first parliament formed after the revolution – which has since been dissolved – but men have completely monopolized the decision-making bodies and leadership posts of the party and the Brotherhood itself.

Liberals are not impressed, calling her candidacy a cynical attempt by the Brotherhood to promote a misleading view of its stance on women.

“They are still using women as decor,” said Nehad Abou-Qomsan, head of the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights.

The Brotherhood contends that it supports women’s participation in politics, business and other parts of public life. But it also advocates a strongly traditional role for women as mothers and wives, and contends that equality cannot undermine that role or contradict Islamic Shariah law.

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