Egypt still wrestling with its radical past

Egyptian link Egypt's arrest of a chemist in connection with the London bomb attacks has highlighted the country's uncomfortable…

Egyptian linkEgypt's arrest of a chemist in connection with the London bomb attacks has highlighted the country's uncomfortable legacy as one of the birthplaces of the radical ideology espoused by al-Qaeda.

While Egypt itself has been relatively quiet since the government quelled an Islamist insurgency in the 1990s, many Islamist radicals hail from there.

Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden's deputy, is Egyptian, as is much of the rest of al-Qaeda's leadership, as well as September 11th organiser Mohammed Atta.

Sayed Qutb, a 20th-century Egyptian theorist who did more than anyone else to create the modern ideology of Islamic fundamentalism, was hanged in 1966.

READ MORE

There is no longer believed to be a large-scale militant movement active inside Egypt, after an insurgency led by the Gama'a Islamiya and Egyptian Islamic Jihad, two groups which aimed to establish a puritan Islamic state, sputtered out in the late 1990s.

The insurgency, which cost the lives of more than 1,300 people, collapsed under heavy government pressure as well as internal divisions created by its last major episode of violence, the 1997 massacre of 58 tourists in the southern Egyptian town of Luxor.

Last year, in a sign of official confidence that the insurgency was not likely to revive, the Egyptian government released several Jamaa leaders from prison after they wrote a series of books renouncing their armed campaign.

Although some Egyptians continue to espouse radical Islamist ideas, a pervasive security apparatus, the concentration of the population in the geographically restricted Nile Valley, and the public revulsion at the excesses of the earlier insurgency combine to inhibit the revival of an armed movement.

The country has, however, witnessed sporadic acts of terrorism in recent years, notably the October 2004 bombing of a hotel in the Sinai resort town of Taba and the April 7th attack on Cairo's Khan al-Khalili bazaar.

The government has blamed both attacks on small, isolated cells - the Taba bombing on a group based among the bedouin of the Sinai peninsula, and the Khan al-Khalili attack on a cell based around a family in Cairo.

There is little substantive evidence to date that would connect either attack to a larger movement.

The latter bombing in particular fits a pattern that some analysts say may become the future of Islamist militancy in repressive but relatively stable states such as Egypt - small groups of amateurs, inspired by al-Qaeda's ideology, launching attacks on unprotected targets.

Egypt is also home to the Muslim Brotherhood, an illegal but semi-tolerated movement that claims it wants to establish an Islamic state by peaceful means.