CAIRO: Security forces detained dozens of members of Egypt’s opposition Muslim Brotherhood in dawn sweeps on Monday targeting men who are likely candidates in local council elections due in April, the Brotherhood said.
The Islamist group said 68 people were detained in raids on homes across Egypt, from the southern province of Qena to northern towns in the Nile Delta, where the Brotherhood has a strong popular base.
Egyptian security sources put the total number of Brotherhood arrests at 66, and said the men were accused of belonging to a banned group, possessing anti-government literature and organising unauthorised meetings.
A Brotherhood spokesman said: “The aim of it all is to prevent them from entering the elections ... They don’t want the Brotherhood to stand as candidates.”
The arrests came a day before the start of a 10-day registration period for candidates wishing to contest the April 8 council elections.
Egypt has stepped up arrests of Brotherhood members, detaining more than 250 members of Egypt’s most powerful opposition group since mid-February.
Monday’s arrests bring the total number held to well over 600, the group said.
A Brotherhood spokesman said those detained on Monday included activists and likely candidates in the local elections, though
he declined to say exactly how many of them were planning to stand.—Reuters
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