Yemen's Islamists are poised to take power, having emerged as the biggest winners of the struggle to oust President Ali Abdullah Saleh, but so far they appear satisfied to share the victory with other parties.
The Islah (reform) Party, the largest opposition group, is a melting pot of Islamists, including the local version of Egypt's Muslim Brothers and the Saudi-influenced Salafists, two groups which locked horns in Egyptian polls.
Its members range from activist Tawakkol Karman, who won the 2011 Nobel Peace prize, to cleric Abdul Majid Zendani, who is suspected by Washington of financing terrorism.
The party also includes tribal chiefs, notably Sheikh Hameed al-Ahmar, the son of the late Sheikh Abdullah, a former head of parliament.
Ten months of nationwide protests demanding an end to Saleh's 33-year rule that culminated last month in his signing of a Gulf-brokered deal which will see him out of office in February.
"Our party does not adopt the slogan 'Islam is the solution' because the question of Islam and the state is not a problem in Yemen, which is Muslim and homogeneous," said Mohammed Qahtan, the party's political department head.
"Our priority is to combat poverty, restore stability and build the state," he told AFP.
Founded in 1990, Islah emerged from the local branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, which was founded in 1968 by Yemeni students returning from Cairo where they were influenced by the persecuted group.
This is my map of the countries that are ruled or poised to be ruled by Islamists in the Middle East. (Saudi Arabia is hard to categorize but since the greatest danger to its leaders comes from the more radical Islamist side I'll leave it out for now.)
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Posted By Elder of Ziyon to Elder of Ziyon at 12/14/2011 01:30:00 AM
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