Muslim Brotherhood (MB) dissident Mohamed Habib declined Sunday a proposal to suspend the group's activities in Egypt, Al Bawaba news reported. The proposal, made by the MB fugitive leading figure Gamal Abdel Satar, ignores the terrorist group's atrocities against the Egyptian people, Habib said, slamming the proposal as a political maneuver. The MB must publicly declare they totally repented and abandoned violence as a way-out of the crisis, Habib, who was the MB supreme Guide Deputy, added, indicating the Egyptian people would then decide whether to include the group within the political life. The proposal, according to Abdel Satar, seeks to relieve what he considered "the regime's aggression" against the Brotherhood. Secretary General of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) International Organization, Ibrahim Munir declined the proposal, calling the group's affiliates to further adhere to its path and ideology. The MB was listed Sept. 2013 by Egypt's judiciary as terrorist following a string of deadly blasts against police personnel and civilians, mostly in the Sinai Peninsula. The latest attack July 1 targeted more than 15 security checkpoints killing and wounding dozens.