Young Egypt Party (1933)

The young Egyptian Party (Arabic حزب مصر الفتاة Hizb Misr El- Fatah, also formerly National Socialist Arab Party) was an Egyptian political party with about 225 party members. She was originally aligned fascist and later represented the Islamic- nationalist positions. In 2012 she went on in the conference party.

History

The young Egyptian party was founded in October 1933 as a "radical nationalist " party with " religious elements " of their leader Ahmed Hussain. The aim of the party was to make Egypt an existing out of Egypt and Sudan, " Empire ", which allies itself with other Arab countries and serves as a " leader of Islam." It was also a militaristic organization whose young members were organized in a paramilitary movement that Green Shirts were called. Established at the same time as many other fascist organizations, the young Egyptian party the achievements of the German Reich but openly admired under the Nazi regime, the enemy of the Egyptian occupation force Britain. As Germany's power grew, strengthened also the anti-British tone of the young Egyptian party.

During her time height in the 1930s, the Green Shirts had some violent confrontations with the blue shirts of the national liberal Wafd Party. One member even perpetrated an attack on Mustafa el- Nahhas Pasha at November 1937. Under pressure from the government, the Green Shirts were banned in 1938. The group was then renamed in 1940 in the Nationalist Islamic Party, as it took a more religious and anti- more British attitude. After Second World War, it was renamed again, now as the Socialist Party of Egypt. The grouping could even post electoral success, as they sent their Vice President Ibrahim Shukri in 1951 the Egyptian parliament. However, it was the movement in 1953, prohibited in the Egyptian Revolution of 1952 along with all other parties.

When the parties were permitted again in Egypt, Ibrahim Shukri formed a group, the Socialist Labor Party of 1978, which despite its name the political content of the populist and nationalist ideology of the young Egyptian party involved. Your party organ was the " Al- Sha'ab " ( The people ).

Another young Egyptian Party group, which retained the original name, was re-established in 1990. It is led by Abdallah Rushdi. In the parliamentary elections in Egypt in 2000, the young Egyptian party sent seven candidates for the mandate seats in the People's Assembly in the race.

Positions

Today's party platform called for:

  • Establishment of a parliamentary / presidential system of government.
  • Expansion of the Egyptian- Arab relations.
  • Achieve the integration with African states.
  • Assumption of a non-aligned policy.
  • Establishment of the so-called socialist Islamic economic system and strengthen the role of the private sector.
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