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- <text id=93TT2131>
- <title>
- Aug. 30, 1993: Bombs in the Name of Allah
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 30, 1993 Dave Letterman
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ISLAM, Page 28
- Bombs in the Name of Allah
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Islamic militants prove they will use any means to overthrow
- Mubarak's secular government
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Dean Fischer/Cairo and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> They prefer softer names, like Islamists or fundamentalists,
- but these were trained killers. They loaded their bomb on a
- motorcycle and slipped it between two parked cars on a narrow,
- tree-shaded street outside the American University campus in
- downtown Cairo. As Interior Minister Hassan al-Alfi's black
- Peugeot rolled past, the terrorists triggered the bomb, blasting
- ball bearings at the Minister's motorcade and passersby on the
- crowded sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p> The carnage on that leafy street was another link in a chain
- of bloody attacks that has swept over Egypt for the past 19
- months. A shadowy coalition of Islamic fundamentalist groups
- has proved its willingness to use any means, no matter how lethal,
- to overthrow the secular government of President Hosni Mubarak,
- a key ally of the U.S. In response, the Cairo government and
- its security forces have shown they will raid, arrest and hang
- as many militants as they think it will take to stamp out the
- insurrection.
- </p>
- <p> The motorcycle bomb was one of a series of similar assassination
- attempts on senior officials, though the first since April.
- In recent months the government had steadily intensified its
- crackdown on the militants, arresting thousands and executing
- 15. Last week's carefully planned assault looked like the radicals'
- reply to the suppression. Their brazen defiance was evident
- in the timing--just before noon on a business day--and the
- location--the middle of the capital, a block from the Interior
- Ministry and from Tahrir Square, known to millions of tourists
- as the site of the Egyptian Museum.
- </p>
- <p> The explosion killed four people and wounded at least 15, including
- al-Alfi, whose arm was broken. From the window of a second-floor
- office John Aydelott, a member of the university faculty, heard
- the roar of the bomb, looked down and saw a woman lying in the
- street. "Her shoulder had been blown away," he recounted, "and
- her legs were slashed. A man nearby was nothing but a torso."
- </p>
- <p> One of the dead was Nazih Rashed, 35, whose leg was severed
- and who died later in a nearby hospital. He had apparently achieved
- martyrdom, since the extremist Islamic Jihad, or Holy War, issued
- a statement claiming responsibility for the bombing and saying
- he was one of the members who carried it out. Police had Rashed
- on top of their most-wanted list, and he was already on trial
- in absentia, charged with murder and membership in an illegal
- group responsible for the 1981 assassination of President Anwar
- Sadat. Rashed, noted police, had been trained in the use of
- explosives when he fought with the fundamentalist mujahedin
- against the communist regime in Afghanistan. According to an
- Interior Ministry statement, the second assailant killed in
- the attack was a high school student, Mahmoud Hafez Zaki. The
- other two victims were a parking attendant and a Palestinian
- accountant who happened to be strolling by.
- </p>
- <p> From his hospital bed, the 57-year-old al-Alfi, who directs
- the nation's hard-pressed 125,000-member police force, went
- on television to prove he had survived. The attack, he said,
- "shows the whole world that these terrorists are killers and
- butchers who have no religion or conscience. We urge all citizens
- to fight them."
- </p>
- <p> Since early 1992, almost 200 people have been killed in the
- Muslim fundamentalists' campaign against the government. The
- targets for their bullets and bombs have shifted from Muslim
- opinion leaders who frown on fundamentalism to Christian Copts,
- foreign tourists and police officers. No matter whom they shoot
- at, their long-term aim remains constant: to topple Mubarak
- and install a purely Islamic anti-Western government, complete
- with such harsh traditional punishments as beheading and limb
- amputation.
- </p>
- <p> Only three days before the bombers struck, a military court
- began trying 53 members of Islamic Jihad and its offshoots on
- charges ranging from attempted murder to conspiracy against
- the government. It was only the first of several trials that
- will haul 756 accused members before the military tribunals
- Mubarak set up when he felt civilian court procedures were dragging
- on too long and inconclusively. As a case in point, a regular
- court in Cairo earlier this month acquitted 24 defendants charged
- with assassinating parliamentary Speaker Rifaat el-Mahgoub almost
- three years ago. The court's chief judge criticized the paramilitary
- national police's methods and charged that "none of the defendants
- have escaped torture."
- </p>
- <p> For Mubarak, the dead terrorist's Afghanistan connection is
- an important one. The President has insisted that the campaign
- of extremist violence in Egypt was sparked by the return of
- Afghan war volunteers, many of them inspired by the fiery preaching
- of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind Egyptian cleric now in
- jail in the U.S. who is linked to the suspects in the bombing
- of New York City's World Trade Center last February. Mubarak
- claims some of the fighters came back by way of Iran and Sudan
- and received subversive training in guerrilla camps there. The
- extremists, he says, "want to destabilize Egypt, the one Arab
- country that made peace with Israel, so it will be easy for
- them to destabilize all the countries in this area."
- </p>
- <p> It is true that almost every secular Arab state from North Africa
- to the Persian Gulf confronts a fundamentalist threat. But they
- would face it even without subversion from abroad. "The problems
- in Egypt," says a U.S. expert, "stem from problems in Egypt.
- I don't think Iranian or Sudanese support is the cause for what's
- going on." Egypt is plagued by a pervasive discontent with the
- country's poverty, unemployment and corruption and a widespread
- conviction that things are not getting better. The slogan "Islam
- is the solution" is embraced by millions of impoverished Egyptians
- who have been completely disillusioned by the failures of Arab
- nationalism and socialism.
- </p>
- <p> The nation's difficulties are multiplied by its unchecked population
- growth. Since Mubarak came to power 12 years ago, the number
- of Egyptians has grown from 43 million to 58 million. "Young,
- educated Arabs who have no job prospects, even as taxi drivers,"
- says a senior British diplomat, "have been willing recruits
- to fundamentalism." These people are coming not only from the
- slums but also from the middle class.
- </p>
- <p> The fundamentalist challenge takes two main forms. In the forefront
- is the traditional, more moderate approach of the 65-year-old
- Muslim Brotherhood, a religious, charitable and educational
- movement that abandoned the use of violence in 1971. It issued
- a statement last week denouncing the bombing as a "dangerous
- evil."
- </p>
- <p> The Brotherhood applied last year to become a political party,
- but the government was determined not to allow what happened
- when the Algerian government permitted fundamentalists to run
- in 1991 parliamentary elections and they swept the first round.
- Cairo denied the Brotherhood's request.
- </p>
- <p> That experience bolstered the case of underground Islamic militants
- who believe it is pointless to wage their battle in the political
- arena. On the verge of victory, the Algerian fundamentalists
- were kept out of power by the government's emergency decrees
- and drawn guns. If election victories are meaningless, the Egyptian
- militants argue, violence is the way to succeed.
- </p>
- <p> The Islamists have made a point of striking directly at ministers
- of the interior, the men in charge of the police crackdown.
- In 1987 terrorists wounded two former ministers, and in October
- 1990 they mistakenly killed parliamentary Speaker el-Mahgoub
- when gunning for Interior Minister Abdel-Halim Moussa. At the
- same time, the terrorists have been attacking members of the
- security forces and tourists, three of whom have been killed.
- The Egyptian tourism industry could have expected to earn $4
- billion this year, but since militants began bombing landmarks
- and shooting up tour buses, that income projection has fallen
- $1 billion.
- </p>
- <p> Living with Islam is a constant dilemma for Mubarak. Says Adel
- Hussein, editor of the opposition newspaper Al Shaab: "He cannot
- exclude Islamists from the political process without alienating
- the nation from its roots." If Mubarak does not choose to reject
- Islam outright, he must try to compromise with it. But fundamentalism
- is such an all-encompassing world view, making no separation
- between religion and government, that finding a middle ground
- is almost impossible. The government suppresses Islamic Jihad
- but tolerates the Muslim Brotherhood, which nevertheless insists,
- "We cannot allow anyone to rule unless that rule is based on
- the spirit of Islam."
- </p>
- <p> Liberal Egyptian intellectuals worry that even mainstream Islam
- may carry the seeds of a future Iranian-style theocracy. A leading
- Muslim cleric, Sheik Mohammed al-Ghozali, shocked officials
- when he testified last month at the Cairo trial of Islamic Group
- members accused of killing a secular writer. "A secularist represents
- a danger to society and the nation that must be eliminated,"
- the sheik declared. "It is the duty of the government to kill
- him."
- </p>
- <p> This kind of icy rigidity reinforces Mubarak's conclusion that
- it makes little sense to negotiate with the fundamentalists.
- They seek capitulation, not compromise. But the government's
- alternative--mass arrests, military trials, executions--is not working either. Harsh repression might even be encouraging
- the radicals. "These young men are martyrs," says an attorney
- for Muslim militants. "They are unafraid to die."
- </p>
- <p> Mubarak will be re-elected to a third six-year term by Parliament
- in October, even though his National Democratic Party is generally
- dismissed as incompetent and corrupt. But the party enjoys an
- overwhelming majority in Parliament, and Mubarak is the sole
- candidate. Every opposition group in the country, including
- the Muslim Brotherhood, refuses to endorse him. As election
- time approaches, Mubarak is talking vaguely about reform. In
- a recent speech he called for more cooperation "between all
- political forces" in order to "surround the abyss of terrorism
- and foil its plots." His supporters say he intends to resign
- his party post, in order to try to raise the presidency above
- politics, and to appoint new, more vigorous ministers to key
- economic posts in the Cabinet. If the economy continues to stagnate,
- however, the Islamists can count on the despair of the nation
- to send them regiments of new recruits.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-