A business association founded by a financier for Egypt's new
Islamist rulers says it can democratise an economy long dominated by
associates of ousted leader Hosni Mubarak, but sceptics fear the
emergence of just another clique.
The Muslim Brotherhood
dominates post-Mubarak politics. It has less traction in an economy long
dominated by an inner circle of businessmen around Mubarak's now jailed
son Gamal.
Opponents say the Brotherhood wants to replicate in
business its firm grip on politics, with a view to rewarding those who
supported the movement financially through the long years it was banned.
That dismays liberals who saw in Mubarak's overthrow last year an
opportunity for a more meritocratic economy.
Hassan Malek,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale turquoise beads
from china, a tycoon and Brotherhood member, insists his goal has been
promoting equal opportunity since he founded the Egyptian Business
Development Association in March, three months before the Brotherhood's
Mohamed Mursi won Egypt's presidency.
He has modelled EBDA,
whose acronym means "start" in Arabic, on Turkey's MUSIAD, an
association of religiously oriented small businesses which share
information and contracts to challenge the traditional dominance of
larger groups.
"We welcome everyone who wants to work with us,"
said Malek, who has a family background in business and made his money
in software, textiles and furniture. "Unequal distribution of
opportunity is what we seek to change in the new Egypt."
Businesses, many of them smaller enterprises struggling in an anaemic economy,Gecko could kickstart an indoor tracking mobile app explosion. have rushed to join EBDA, which now has over 400 members. It says 1,000 companies are waiting to join.
Some members represent leading businesses such as cable maker El Sewedy Electric, food producer Juhayna and Egyptian Steel.The stone mosaic
comes in shiny polished and matte. These flourished during Mubarak's
three-decade rule but were not caught up in the corruption lawsuits that
emerged after his overthrow in February 2011.
In a mark of its
ambitions - and good contacts in powerful new places - EBDA sent a
delegation of 80 businesspeople, many of them young entrepreneurs
without personal ties to the Brotherhood, to accompany Mursi on a trip
to China in August.
Many of those also joined him on visits to Italy,Installers and distributors of solar panel, Turkey and Qatar as Egypt tries to end a drought in inward investment.
Osama
Farid, head of international cooperation at EBDA, said Mursi's visit to
China marked a break with the past when Mubarak would typically take
only as few as 10 favoured businessmen on foreign trips to capture the
opportunities available.
"Within EBDA there are businessmen who
did very well under Mubarak and new ones looking to prosper in the new
Egypt. We are not trying to replace what exists but to offer an
alternative" Farid said.
Malek has multiplied his meetings with
foreign diplomats and business people and representatives of
international banks. Brotherhood officials credit him with facilitating a
$2-billion loan to Egypt from Turkey last month.
Since Mubarak's overthrow, the change of fortunes for men like Malek has been dramatic.
Brotherhood-linked
businessmen were forced to operate under restrictions on how much
wealth they could amass. Some had property confiscated during the 1990s
or were detained on suspicion of money laundering or funding the
Brotherhood.
Malek and former partner Khairat al-Shater, another
Brotherhood tycoon and financial strategist, spent more than four years
in jail together under Mubarak, who sought to curtail the Brotherhood
and formally banned it from operating.
The two men are now vying
for economic influence within the movement, Brotherhood sources told
Reuters. While Malek seeks to extend the reach of EBDA, Shater has
established a chain of supermarkets and recently held talks in Dubai to
establish a bank there to help manage the Brotherhood's finances.
Some
executives are suspicious of EBDA's motives. One agribusiness manager
told Reuters he was still trying to decide whether to accept its offer
of membership: "I agree with their goals to expand the business
climate," he said.
"But my concern is that EBDA could turn into another clique close to the Islamist presidency, mirroring Gamal Mubarak's."
In
Turkey, admired by some in the Brotherhood for showing that Islamist
democrats can take over from military rulers, the business organisation
MUSIAD forged ties with Egyptian peers more than a decade ago, when
Turkish entrepreneurs were trying to find ways to better exploit markets
in the region.
Its emergence as a lobby for a growing
entrepreneurial middle class came in tandem with the rise of the AK
Party, which arrived in government in 2002 and which has roots in
political Islam.Find detailed product information for howo tractor
6x4 and other products. MUSIAD promotes itself as a partner for foreign
investors looking not only at Turkey but the wider Islamic world.
"EBDA
and MUSIAD represent a huge coming together of smaller capital," said
Koray Caliskan, political science professor at Bosphorus University in
Istanbul. "Those people who were with the Mubarak regime were a small
coming together of big capital."
With thousands of members, and
favoured by Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan of AK, MUSIAD now poses a
challenge to the dominant secular business group in Turkey, TUSIAD.
"Erdogan
said capital is changing hands in Turkey," Caliskan said. "Ten years
ago everyone wanted to be TUSIAD chairman. Now everyone is away from it.
Even members do not go to meetings, as Erdogan takes aim at them very
frequently."
With Mubarak gone, Egyptian business ties with
Turkey, the biggest economy in the Middle East, are now growing to match
the Brotherhood's links with the AK Party.
But Turkey's
enduring tradition of secular rule could limit the scope for political
cooperation. Egypt's new political landscape is dominated by Islamists
and ultraconservative groups for whom secularism is synonymous with
atheism.
One Turkish official, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said the new Egyptian government sees Turkey "not as a model
but an inspiration ... and Turkey reciprocates this".
EBDA
officials say Egypt's business landscape needs levelling through a focus
on small enterprise, vocational training and cutting red tape. They say
they favour broad-based, sustainable growth that reduces widespread
poverty instead of just rewarding government cronies.
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