I don’t want to go into the details of the case right now, but it is likely that the decision came a) from high up, i.e. Mubarak, and b) to avoid the embarrassment of having the administrative court rule in favor of Hizb Al Ghad and overturning the HPPC’s decision. Note that the key decision-maker at that level is Safwat Al Sherif, the former Minister of Information and current head of the Shura Council and secretary-general of the ruling National Democratic Party. As you might guess, he’s no fan of new parties.
The bottom line: a good first step, but one that probably would have come anyway through the judicial system. Will be more excited if Karamah and Al Wasat, for instance, get through and if currently frozen parties (such as the rather nasty left-Islamist Labor party and the ridiculous Ahrar party) are unfrozen.
Thanks for this; I’ve noted it http://headheeb.blogmosis.com/archives/026629.html“>here.
BTW, this happened too late to get into the current Al-Ahram Weekly. You scooped ’em by a week.
I would like to correspond with your group
Mona Markram – Ebeid
I would like to correspond, I have a proposal that will boost the Egyptian economy into high gear. If the “party of tomorrow” wants to win this year, it will need a proposal of this type to create enough interest. I admire everthing that this party stands for and I agree that our President Bush has made the US a bad name in the Arab world.
Resp. Harold Van Asche