Nephew of Sadat killer returns to Egypt from Iran
CAIRO  (AP) — The nephew of President Anwar Sadat's assassin and son of a  wanted Islamist returned to Egypt for the first time in two decades on  Saturday after Egypt's new leaders removed him and others from an entry  blacklist in an apparent shift in policy.
Khaled  el-Islambouli returned with his wife, two children and three siblings  after getting travel documents from the Egyptian Embassy in Turkey,  Cairo airport officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because  they were not authorized to talk to reporters.
The  ruling military council that took control of Egypt from ousted  President Hosni Mubarak has removed nearly 2,000 people from a list of  Egyptians barred from entering the country. Other officials said many  more Egyptians remain barred from entry, and a separate blacklist for  foreigners remains in place.
Some,  like el-Islambouli and his family, were not sought by authorities but  had been included on the list under Mubarak's rule as a way to pressure  their wanted relatives. Most of those barred from entry were Islamists  who traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan in the 1980s to join the fight  against the Soviet forces that invaded Afghanistan.
After  a wave of attacks by Islamists in Egypt in the 1990s, Mubarak's  government had decided to prevent them from returning to Egypt and also  included their families.
An  expert in Islamic movements said allowing the return of family members  who are not wanted eliminates a policy that some had blamed for  radicalizing Islamists and turning them against Egypt's leaders.
"Denying  those who fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s, known as Arab Afghans,  was one of the reasons why al-Qaida came into being in the first place,"  said Ammar Ali Hassan.
Hassan described the change as a "humanitarian gesture."
Some  security officials worry that allowing such a large number of former  Jihadists to return to Egypt may pose a security a risk. But Ammar said  their return could also provide a trove of intelligence information on  those who are wanted.
El-Islambouli  left Egypt at the age of 2. He is the nephew of the man who killed  Sadat in 1981, whose name is also Khaled el-Islambouli.
The  airport officials said he had been living in Iran, where his wanted  father, Mohammed el-Islambouli, is also believed to be living.
His  father is one of a number of Egyptians Mubarak's regime had wanted  extradited from Iran. He is wanted in connection with attacks in Egypt  in the 1990s. The extradition issue was one of several that further  soured relations between Iran and Mubarak's government.
Iran  first cut diplomatic ties after Egypt signed a peace agreement with  Israel in 1979 and provided asylum for the deposed Iranian Shah Mohammed  Reza Pahlavi.
The  interim government that took office after the fall of Mubarak has said  it is ready to open a new page with Iran. It is not clear if  el-Islambouli's return is related.

