Ahmed Shafiq has made his first comments since arriving in Cairo amid a
swirl of rumors he had been kidnapped. The former premier and air force
officer says he is still considering a run for the presidency in 2018.
Former Egyptian prime minister and presidential hopeful Ahmed Shafiq said Sunday he had not been kidnapped and was still considering running in next year's election.
The former air force chief had not been
heard from since arriving in Cairo on Saturday from the United Arab
Emirates, where he had been in exile since 2012.
Aides and family members said he had been taken from his UAE home and deported, days after he made an announcement that he would run for president.
Shafiq
is viewed as the strongest challenger for President Abdel-Fattah
el-Sissi, who hasn't yet made an announcement on whether he will run
next year. He is, however, expected to do so.
'Talk to people in the street'
"Today,
I am here in the country, so I think I am free to deliberate further on
the issue, to explore and go down and talk to people in the street,"
Shafiq said Sunday in his first television interview since arriving in
Egypt.
"There's a chance now to investigate more and see exactly what is needed ... to feel out if this is the logical choice."
Squashing
rumors he had been kidnapped, Shafiq said authorities picked him up at
the airport and brought him to a hotel in Cairo, adding that his home
needed some renovations.
"I was surprised truthfully when I was
in the car that I was being driven to one of the most distinguished
hotels in the area where I live," he said in the interview on Dream
TV. "Here I am talking to you and not kidnapped or anything."
His
lawyer, Dina Adly, wrote on her Facebook page that she had met with him
at the hotel on Sunday and that he was not under any investigation.
Egypt needs new blood: Shafiq
Shafiq
announced his intention to run for the presidency on Wednesday, saying
the country needed new blood to solve its many problems.
He
apparently upset his UAE hosts after claiming in an interview on
Al-Jazeera that he was being prevented from leaving the country. The
UAE, alongside Arab Gulf states including Saudi Arabia, view the
Qatar-based TV network as propaganda and want it shut down.
The
countries are also close allies of el-Sissi, who they view as a bulwark
against Islamist militants and the Muslim Brotherhood, an ideological
and political rival of the Gulf monarchies.
Shafiq ran for the presidency in 2012, but narrowly lost to Islamist Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood.
He then fled the country after facing a series of criminal charges, all of which were later dismissed. El-Sissi led a military coup against Morsi in 2013, subsequently banning the Muslim Brotherhood.
Source:Dw
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