Mohammed Khairat Saad El-Shater (born 4 May 1950) is an Egyptian engineer, businessman and Islamist political activist. He was born on May 4 1950, in Dakahlia. He was the Muslim Brotherhood’s candidate for the Egyptian presidential election in 2012 before disqualification by the election commission. Previously, he was the deputy chairman of the Brotherhood.
Education, Life and Career
Khairat El-Shater joined the youth wing of the Nasserist Arab Socialist Union at age 16. He studied engineering at the Alexandria University. He also has a bachelor degree in Anthropology from Ain Shams University. He has a master’s in Construction Management from Mansoura University and acquired diplomas in Islamic Studies, Business Administration, Social Work and NGOs, and International Marketing. After serving in the military for two years, El-Shater studied for a Master’s degree and worked as a lecturer at the Mansoura University. Khairat al-Shater’s political activism started in 1966, when he was still in secondary school. He joined the Socialist Youth Organization and, in 1967, became a founding member of al-Gama`a al-Islamiyya (the Islamic Group) in Alexandria, “where he played a pivotal role in bringing about Islamic awakening in the early Seventies. In 1968, he participated in the student protests against the government. After president Anwar Sadat’s assassination in 1981 El-Shater was exiled as an Islamist dissident, and left for England. After returning in the mid-1980s, he became an active member of the Muslim Brotherhood. In 1995, he became head of the Brotherhood’s Greater Cairo branch.
“The regime then made us believe that we were going to win the war, so we were all very disappointed when we heard of the naksa [defeat or setback],” al-Shater said.
El-Shater has led a successful furniture and textile business with branches in Cairo’s luxurious shopping malls, which earned him a fortune of several millions. He is considered a main financier and chief strategist of the Brotherhood. Under the Mubarak regime, he was imprisoned from 2007 until his release by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces in March 2011. Following the victory of the Freedom and Justice Party (parliamentary wing of the Muslim Brotherhood) in the 2011/12 parliamentary election, El-Shater was tipped as a likely candidate for Prime Minister of a coalition government. The Middle East researcher Avi Asher-Schapiro considers El-Shater to be a strong advocate of privatization and free market.
Even though he is the nominal number two in the Brotherhood’s hierarchy, some consider him its actual leader. In the eyes of many analysts and activists, he is one of the main reasons behind the anti-revolutionary style of politics the MB followed since the fall of Mubarak. He is also claimed to be responsible for the expulsion of the dissident Brotherhood member Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh and his supporters.
In December 2011, al-Shater was named one of Foreign Policy magazine’s “Top 100 Global Thinkers”.
His Presidential candidacy
On 31 March 2012, the Freedom and Justice Party named him their candidate for the presidential election in May. El-Shater formally resigned from the Brotherhood in order to run for President, to avoid violating the Brotherhood’s pledge not to field a candidate. The announcement of Shater’s presidential candidacy is a historical first for the 83-year-old group, which originally pledged that none of their members would run for president to calm secular and western governments’ fears of a complete Islamist takeover by the group. Earlier this year, Khairat El-Shater had denied any intentions for entering the presidential race on Al-Jazeerah Arabic, after Ahmed Mansour, host of the show Without Limits, had subtly questioned the sequence of events which later took place on the 31st March 2012. The Egyptian Supreme Council of the Armed Forces barred El-Shater from the presidential race on 14 April 2012, stating that he was only released from prison in March 2011, in violation of election rules stating that a candidate has to be released from prison for 6 years before he can become a candidate.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khairat_El-Shater
http://wiki.aucegypt.edu/isqatalnizam/index.php/Khairat_al-Shater