Helbawi, most noted Brotherhood dissident, dies
Kamal al-Helbawi, a dissident leader of the Muslim Brotherhood and president and founder of the Islamic League in Britain, died on February 28. He was 84.
Who is he?
He is Kamal Tawfiq al-Helbawi. He was born in 1939
and received a bachelor of arts in 1960.
Helbawi also obtained a degree in business
administration from the American University in Cairo in 1971.
He served as the former spokesman of the
Brotherhood in the West, before his defection from the group.
After the January 2011 revolution in Egypt, he
entered into major disagreements with the leaders of the group.
His view was that the group had deviated from its
rightful path by turning to violence.
Journey
Helbawi joined the Muslim Brotherhood at an early
age, specifically during his secondary school years when he was in Menoufia
governorate in the Nile Delta at the beginning of the 1950s.
He held several positions within the
organization, up to the position of a member of the leadership of the
International Organization which includes the Guidance Office and the Consultative
Council.
About his beginnings with the group, al-Helbawi
said in a previous television interview that he had joined the Brotherhood at
an early age.
He added that in the 1990s, after an extended journey,
he became a member of the leadership of the International Organization.
Helbawi noted that he had resigned from the
leadership in 1997 and that he worked on several advocacy intellectual projects,
including one about terrorism in the West.
He returned to Egypt after 23 years of Hosni
Mubarak's rule.
"After returning, I looked closely at the
situation of the Brotherhood in Egypt, and these days revealed everything
within the group," Helbawi said.
He added that at this point he decided to resign from
the whole organization in late March 2012, when the Brotherhood thought it was on
a political rise, and focused on power more than on advocacy.
Conflicts
Halbawi entered into disagreements with the
Brotherhood in 2012, after the group's decision to field Khairat al-Shater in
the presidential elections.
In March of the same year, he officially
announced his resignation and came out opposing the group and its positions for
many years, where he said then that the Brotherhood deviated from its true
project.
Betrayal
Helbawi spoke in a televised interview about the
Brotherhood's betrayal of the January Revolution.
He referred to several instances of this betrayal,
including their decision to field a candidate in the presidential elections.
He noted that the group was dreaming of taking
over Egypt's presidency, even as people were dying on the streets.
He also referred to the Brotherhood's decision to
compete in the parliamentary elections, having left the streets and the squares
for the true revolutionaries.