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Egyptian Islamist party splits

CAIRO, Jan. 3 (UPI) -- A radical group in Egypt's conservative Islamist party has broken away and could strengthen support for Sharia law ahead of legislative elections, experts said.

The group, which will be called al-Watan, or Homeland, split from the Islamist Nour Party, an ally of President Mohamed Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, though more religiously conservative, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

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Emad Abdel Ghafour, the former head of the Nour Party, announced Tuesday he was heading the split joined by hundreds of defectors.

Ghafour said al-Watan will be an ally to a party led by former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, who has a following of ultraconservative Islamist activists and champions the institution of Sharia, or strict Islamic law, the Journal reported.

Shadi Hamid, an Egypt expert at Brookings Doha Center, said Ismail "offers a more revolutionary form of Salafism."

"It's a fundamental difference in how to practice politics," he added.

The party split could strengthen more radical parties ahead of upcoming parliamentary elections, a date for which has not been determined, the Journal reported.

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