The new Brotherhood priest… Who is Bhiri the acting leader?
The Muslim Brotherhood terrorist group announced during the Shura Council meeting the appointment of Mohamed Bhiri as acting leader, considering that Bhiri’s presence at the head of the group could guarantee the reunion of the warring groups, with Mohieddine Al-Zayt as his deputy.
Who is he?
Mohamed Ahmed Bhiri is one of the leaders of the first generation within the Brotherhood, according to Mohamed Al-Surwi, in his book “The Muslim Brotherhood the Earthquake and the Awakening”. He was the 25th defendant in the case No. 12 of 1965 (organization of 65 with Sayyid Qutb, at that time he was 22 years old.
He was sentenced to life imprisonment. After his release from prison in the early 1980s, before his full sentence, Mohamed Bhiri was assigned to oversee the Egyptian Brothers who were working in schools and educational institutes in Yemen. He is one of the leaders of the Brotherhood, who greatly influenced the formation of the organization’s ideology and ideology over the years. He is considered one of the leaders of the “Brotherhood” who has greatly influenced the formation of the organization’s thought and ideology over the years, and one of the most dangerous figures within the terrorist group. He was part of “Organization 65” in Egypt, which was founded to carry out several assassinations and “change the constitution by force”, according to the text of the indictment that the Egyptian authorities – at the time – directed against the organization’s members, and accused Bhiri; Who was responsible for the “Sayeda Zainab” group in the case (Organization 65) and was sentenced to life imprisonment, after he worked as a chemical engineer in the Nasr Company for the Coke and Chemical Industry in Helwan (far south of Cairo), according to the book “The Muslim Brotherhood’s Earthquake and Awakening” by its author Muhammad Saroui.
Founder of the Yemen Brotherhood
When Bhiri’s followers spread, some of them were sent to countries in Africa, foremost among them Somalia, Djibouti, Nigeria, Senegal, Mali, Mauritania, Kenya, and Sudan, in addition to Central Asian countries such as Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Belarus, Chechnya, and Ukraine, under the name of teaching Arabic to Muslims. He played a major role in deporting many Yemenis and Egyptians to Pakistan and Afghanistan in cooperation with Abdullah Azzam, the Brotherhood leader and spiritual father of armed terrorist and extremist organizations there, with the aim of establishing an organization there under the umbrella of the Brotherhood. He also realized the danger of the spread of the Brotherhood in his organization; “For nearly 20 years in Sanaa, he was in charge of the Egyptian Brotherhood’s organization in Yemen, forming a network of extended and secret ties.”
Failed Tasks
The official responsible for coordinating all these branches with the International Brotherhood Organization in London assumed responsibility for arranging the accommodation and living conditions of the fugitives from Egypt, and transferred some of them to Turkey, Somalia, and South Africa, taking advantage of his complicated relations through his position as Brotherhood official in Africa. He moved between Turkey and the United Kingdom to coordinate and consult on the issues of the Brotherhood, with international organizations and Western governments. Bhiri played an important role in containing the crisis that hit the Group because of the visit of some of its leaders to Iran. He succeeded in bringing the conflicting leaderships closer together, which qualified him to impose himself as an alternative and effective third guide in the absence of General Muhammad Badie, who is imprisoned on issues in Egypt.
More recently, Bhiri visited Turkey to contain the crises, and to contain the crisis in Egypt, and to escape there, especially, especially, and the Brotherhood, and after the Brotherhood’s retreat, and the Council of the Brotherhood, and the Al-Shura Al-His name was mentioned in the recent audio leak, while Amir Bassam accused him of embezzling the group’s funds and of registering a residential building in his name, as well as Bassim Mahmoud Hussein, the group’s secretary-general, and Mahmoud al-Iberi, the group’s leader.