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Will slaying affect potential Cairo-Brotherhood detente?

The recent police killing of a former Muslim Brotherhood leader wanted by the government could cause a violent backlash in the short term, but might help bring about a reconciliation.
Muslim Brotherhood memebers stand trial for an armed sit-in at Rabaa square, at a court on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt May 31, 2016. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh - RTX2F0TW
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There have been persistent rumors, and denials, in recent months that the Egyptian government and the Muslim Brotherhood have been considering a reconciliation to end their bitter, yearslong rivalry. Now observers are wondering how the recent killing of a former, but still influential, Brotherhood leader might affect the situation.

Egypt’s Interior Ministry said earlier this month that Mohamed Kamal, a former member of the Brotherhood’s upper-echelon leadership known as the Guidance Bureau, had been killed Oct. 3. The police described Kamal as being responsible for the killing of Col. Wa’il Tahun of the State Security Investigations Service.

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