Fouad Dawalibi unveils new secrets about Sadat's assassination
Fouad Dawalibi, one of the founders of Jamaa Islamiya, a former member of its Consultative Council, and one of the suspects in the assassination of late president Anwar Sadat on October 6, 1981, reveals new secrets about the assassination of the late leader.
Dawalibi told al-Manara that Jamaa Islamiya
leaders hesitated to assassinate Sadat following a meeting with Abdel Salam
Farag, the head of Jihad Organization, who presented them with justification
from the texts for killing Sadat.
He said the first Jamaa Islamiya meeting on
Sadat's assassination included Karam Zuhdi, the emir of Jamaa Islamiya, and
three members of the Consultative Council of the organization, namely Dawalibi,
Assem Abdel Maguid and Osama Hafez, who is the incumbent emir of the group.
The meeting, he said, was held at the flat of
Khaled Shawqi al-Islamboli, an Egyptian army officer then. Islamboli was a
member of Jamaa Islamiya and a close friend of Karam Zuhdi.
"During the meeting, Islamboli suggested
the idea of assassinating Sadat," Dawalibi said.
He added that he would participate in the
military parade which would be held a short time later to commemorate the
October 1973 victory over the Israeli army.
According to Dawalibi, Farag, who attended
the same meeting, also liked the idea. He then presented proof from the Islamic
religion to justify the assassination of the Egyptian leader.
The emir of Jamaa Islamiya, Dawalibi said,
approved the idea along with the members of the Consultative Council of his
organization.
He said Zuhdi asked other members of the
Consultative Council of his group, namely Nageh Ibrahim, Essam Derbala, Hamdi
Abdurrahman, and Ali al-Sherif, to hold a meeting on October 5 to assert their
approval of the assassination plan. The time of the meeting was decided in a
car on the road to Beni Mazar, Minya.
"The first group of members, which
arrived from Cairo, met Islamboli at his private residence," Dawalibi
said.
Nonetheless, he said, the second group of
members rejected the plan, saying the harms Sadat's assassination would bring
would far outweigh the benefits this assassination would bring. The same group
of members expected the assassination to have dangerous consequences.
Belated arrival
Hafez,
Dawalibi said, took a long time
to report to Zuhdi.
He said Zuhdi then asked him and Abdel Maguid
to travel to Cairo to tell Islamboli that the operation was cancelled.
Nonetheless,
the operation had already been executed by then.
Dawalibi and Abdel Maguid
arrived in Cairo when it was too late to tell Islamboli that the operation had
been cancelled.
The
state of emergence was immediately declared.
The
cell that assassinated Sadat included Islamboli, Atta Tayel, Hussein Abbas,
Abdel Hamid, and Abdel Salam.
Aboud Zomor participated in making the plan of the attack.
Jamaa Islamiya tried to control Assuit, two
days after Sadat's assassination. It attacked the security directorate
building, which left 118 policemen dead.