Egypt's Jama'a Islamiya (Islamic Group) dissident Abdel Rahman Sakr slammed the group's heavyweights, fugitive overseas, for inciting youths to join the jihad in Syria, Al Bawaba News reported Wednesday. "Why don't you go to Syria yourselves? You push youths to death while you stay behind curtains," Sakr said in a message to the inciters. A large number of the Islamic group's leaders including Tarek Al Zomur and Assem Abdel Majid, who were involved in the assassination of former president, Anwar Sadat in 1981, fled to Turkey and Qatar after former president, Mohamed Morsi was ousted July 2013 amid mass street protests. The Brotherhood-allied Jama'a Islamiya is currently moaning under severe defections with dozens of leaders adopting a more peaceful track with the state and calling for the group's withdrawal from the pro-Morsi National Alliance to Support Legitimacy (NASL).