According to Gate Ahram, the Muslim Brotherhood’s former General Guide, basically the group’s supreme leader, Mahdi Akef, surprised many when he declared during an interview with a Kuwaiti newspaper that the “Brotherization” of Egypt’s state organs—which would see the transformation of Egypt into the image of the Muslim Brotherhood—is President Muhammad Morsi’s plan. Akef was referring to Morsi’s electoral program, also known as his “Nahda project,” which, as it appears on the English-language website of the Muslim Brotherhood, says nothing about making Egypt’s state organs conform to the Muslim Brotherhood, but rather speaks glowingly of freedom, equality, and pluralism.
According to Gate Ahram, the Muslim Brotherhood’s former General Guide, basically the group’s supreme leader, Mahdi Akef, surprised many when he declared during an interview with a Kuwaiti newspaper that the “Brotherization” of Egypt’s state organs—which would see the transformation of Egypt into the image of the Muslim Brotherhood—is President Muhammad Morsi’s plan. Akef was referring to Morsi’s electoral program, also known as his “Nahda project,” which, as it appears on the English-language website of the Muslim Brotherhood, says nothing about making Egypt’s state organs conform to the Muslim Brotherhood, but rather speaks glowingly of freedom, equality, and pluralism.