"We have a single demand. Once it is met we will engage in dialogue,"Mohammed Badie told Al-Jazeera television Friday.
Egypt’s opposition Muslim Brotherhood supreme guide said on Friday the movement was ready to hold talks on the transition from President Hosni Mubarak’s rule one had resigned."We have a single demand. Once it is met we will engage in dialogue," Mohammed Badie told Al-Jazeera television Friday.
"We stand with all the political forces supporting dialogue with whoever wants to implement reforms in the country after the departure of this unjust, corrupt tyrant."
Badie also said that the departure of Mubarak after 32 years in power "is the demand of all the people. That he leaves today. That he doesn't stay a single hour more. That this corrupt regime leaves today."
He added that the departure would be "followed by a transition period under the vice president with a full mandate."
In a television address late on Thursday, newly-appointed Vice President Omar Suleiman announced he was open to including the Muslim Brotherhood in talks he plans to hold with the opposition.
"We reached out to them. They were invited. They hesitated," Suleiman said of the brotherhood, which is officially banned but tolerated in Egypt.
On Thursday, brotherhood spokesman Mohammed Mursi said the group had rejected "categorically all dialogue with the regime."