World | Egypt Amid Chaos, Egypt's Parties Hold Rare Sit-Down Country's top religious scholar gets call for unity, but no concrete action By Kevin Spak Posted Jan 31, 2013 1:25 PM CST Copied In this Monday, Jan. 28, 2013 file photo, Egyptian protesters clash with riot police, background, near Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File) Egyptians saw a shockingly rare sight today: The leaders of their country's fractured and feuding political parties actually sitting across the table from one another. In a meeting brokered by Egypt's most influential Islamic scholar, Grand Imam Ahmed al-Tayyeb, leaders from both Egypt's secular opposition and its Islamist factions, from Mohamed ElBaradei to the head of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, agreed to renounce violence and seek national unity, the New York Times reports. The imam emerged from the meeting and called for all policy disputes to be settled via a peaceful national dialogue encompassing "all components of the Egyptian society," adding that "political work has nothing to do with violence or sabotage." Participants on all sides seemed to agree—"We come out of this meeting with a type of optimism," ElBaradei said. But opposition leaders didn't cancel any of the demonstrations planned for tomorrow, Reuters reports, and Mohamed Morsi, who is currently in Germany, dismissed any possibility of a unity government. Read These Next More details coming out about the last party the Reiners attended. The president's son is set to marry again. Susie Wiles thinks Trump has an 'alcoholic's personality.' Trump's Reiner remarks were too much for some Republicans. Report an error