Tag Archives: Morsi Muslim Brotherhood

Egypt faces huge challenges after political turmoil

The interim government tasked with putting Egypt back on track after president Mohamed Morsi’s ouster faces enormous challenges, from fixing the shattered economy to restoring security and democracy, experts say.

The new cabinet does have several factors working in its favour, however.

A wide section of the population that was bitterly disillusioned with Morsi’s rule, including several ministers, is supported by the country’s top religious authorities, both Muslim and Christian.

Separately, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait threw Egypt a financial lifeline last week, pledging $12 billion in aid and allaying fears of the country going bankrupt in the short term.

But major risks remain, with the threat of more violence between members of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood and the security forces, and a surge in deadly attacks by militants in the Sinai, home to Egypt’s luxury Red Sea resorts.

Interim president Adly Mansour has set the government a tight timetable for reforming the constitution and holding fresh elections, while structural economic problems, including unaffordable food and fuel subsidies and a bloated public sector, must be confronted.

“There are a variety of challenges and unfortunately they can be overwhelming,” said Samer Shehata, who teaches Arab studies at Georgetown University.

Islamist parties and movements are totally absent from the new 34-member cabinet, in which a number of well-known technocrats hold senior positions.

Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy is a seasoned diplomat and former ambassador to Washington, accomplished economist and World Bank veteran Ahmed Galal heads the finance ministry, and Ziad Bahaa Eldin, another finance expert, was nominated minister for international cooperation.

Leftwing activist Kamal Abu Eita, a respected trade union leader, was appointed labour minister.

Army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s appointment as deputy premier bolsters the military’s strong support for the government, while also raising suspicions about the cabinet’s independence from the generals who toppled Morsi.

Shehata says restoring security, which has sharply deteriorated since the fall of former strongman Hosni Mubarak in 2011, is essential.

A key task facing the government, namely how to bring back international investment and attract tourists, “has to be predicated on some kind of stability or security”, he said.

Reforming the police, known for its brutal methods and a leadership little-changed since the Mubarak era, is another pressing issue.

“The police hated the Brotherhood and now the police are newly elevated and I’m afraid calls for reform of the interior ministry in a meaningful way are not going to be heard or are not going to be executed,” Shehata said.

Sophie Pommier, an expert on the Arab world at Sciences-Po university in Paris, says the new government is under greater pressure to achieve results than its predecessor.

“Lacking the legitimacy of an elected government, it will have to earn it through concrete results,” she said.

Besides fixing the economy, the cabinet headed by liberal economist Hazem al-Beblawi “must meet high expectations in terms of the redistribution” of wealth, with Egyptians “waiting for quick signs that things are going in the right direction,” Pommier added.

But continuing violence “will complicate the situation”, she said.

The Brotherhood, weakened but not defeated after Morsi’s overthrow, has certainly …read more

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Hundreds of Morsi supporters protest outside Egypt Cabinet building

Several hundred supporters of Egypt’s deposed president are protesting near the Cabinet building in central Cairo against the country’s new interim government.

The demonstrators Wednesday say the new leadership is illegitimate and demand that ousted President Mohammed Morsi be reinstated.

Egypt’s new 34-member Cabinet was sworn-in on Tuesday. It features several prominent figures from the country’s liberal and secular factions, as well as three women and three Christians.

There are no ministers from Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood or other Islamist groups.

The interim government is part of a military-backed transition plan following the July 3 coup that deposed Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president.

Also Wednesday, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton is in Cairo for talks with Egypt’s interim leaders.

…read more

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Egypt: Morsi supporters protest outside Cabinet

Several hundred supporters of Egypt’s deposed president are protesting near the Cabinet building in central Cairo against the country’s new interim government.

The demonstrators Wednesday say the new leadership is illegitimate and demand that ousted President Mohammed Morsi be reinstated.

Egypt’s new 34-member Cabinet was sworn-in on Tuesday. It features several prominent figures from the country’s liberal and secular factions, as well as three women and three Christians.

There are no ministers from Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood or other Islamist groups.

The interim government is part of a military-backed transition plan following the July 3 coup that deposed Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president.

Also Wednesday, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton is in Cairo for talks with Egypt’s interim leaders.

…read more

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Islamist lawmakers demand Morsi's return in Egypt

Islamist lawmakers in Egypt’s disbanded upper house of parliament demanded Saturday the army reinstate ousted President Mohammed Morsi, and called on other legislatures around the world not to recognize the country’s new military-backed leadership.

Morsi’s supporters, including his Islamist allies, remain steadfast in their rejection of the popularly supported military coup that toppled Morsi nearly two weeks ago. They have staged a series of mass protests in Cairo to push their demands, and are vowing to stay in the streets until Morsi is returned to office.

Speaking at a mass rally staged by Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo, the two dozen former parliamentarians, all Islamist members of the Shura Council that was dissolved by court order, accused the military of attempting to restore a “corrupt and dictatorial” regime.

Morsi was Egypt’s first freely elected president, succeeding longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak who himself was toppled in 2011. The military ousted Morsi after millions of protesters took to the streets calling for his removal.

The military has brushed aside the Brotherhood’s demands, while the new army-backed administration of interim President Adly Mansour has forged ahead with a swift timetable to amend the now suspended constitution, drafted under Morsi, and to hold parliamentary and presidential elections by early next year.

While the presidency has floated offers of reconciliation with the Brotherhood, authorities are simultaneously clamping down the group. So far, five of its top leaders have been arrested, and arrest warrants have been issued against the group’s top leader and nine other Islamists. Islamist TV networks, meanwhile, have been shuttered.

Prosecutors on Saturday said they continue to investigate allegations that Morsi and 30 other Brotherhood leaders escaped from prison in 2011 with help from the Palestinian militant group Hamas. That jailbreak occurred amid the uprising that toppled Mubarak.

Street violence has largely ceased since Monday’s deadly clashes that left more than 50 Muslim Brotherhood supporters dead and hundreds wounded after they were holding a sit-in in front of Republican Guard forces club. The Brotherhood accuses the military of opening fire on protesters, while the army says Morsi supporters instigated the violence.

The Brotherhood has remained adamant in its opposition to the new political landscape, and shows no sign of backing down in its showdown with the military-backed interim leadership.

On his Facebook page, Mohammed el-Beltagi, leading Brotherhood member said that “those who want reconciliation, our arms are open … but those who want reconciliation, do not fire bullets … they say they made a mistake and tell the killer to step aside.”

Morsi’s supporters have pledged to keep protesting until the military meets their demands — the reinstatement of Morsi, the Islamist-drafted constitution and the Islamist-dominated legislature — and leading Brotherhood member Essam el-Arian called for another mass rally on Monday.

The deposed president’s supporters have been holding a sit-in in front of the Rabaah al-Adawiya mosque in eastern Cairo for two weeks. The rally has taken on a more permanent air, with tents going up as well as bathrooms being constructed behind brick walls to provide some privacy. Army soldiers stand guard from …read more

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Egypt upheaval mars hopes of end to economic woes

Egypt’s shattered economy was boosted this week by Gulf allies pledging billions of dollars in aid, but analysts say this simply buys time as political turmoil deepens its economic malaise.

The millions of ordinary Egyptians angered by record high unemployment, soaring inflation and chronic fuel shortages who took to the streets two weeks ago demanding Mohamed Morsi’s resignation blamed him for letting the economy nosedive.

Fuel supplies have returned, after panic buying before the military coup on July 3, and three Gulf monarchies relieved at the toppling of Egypt’s Islamist president have pledged $12 billion in assistance.

But dire security problems and political instability mean a return of the tourists and foreign investment that Egypt so desperately needs are a distant prospect.

And progress remains stalled on negotiations with the International Monetary Fund on a $4.8-billion loan.

“Even if they do agree on the loan, I just don’t believe that we’re going to see a flood of investment,” said financial analyst Andrew Cunningham.

“The country has been in turmoil since 2011, there’s just been a military coup and they’re shooting people on the streets. This is hardly an attractive prospect.”

Gulf pledges of financial assistance are a lifeline for the new administration.

Foreign reserves have fallen by almost 60 percent since the revolution that toppled Hosni Mubarak in February 2011, to 14.9 billion dollars in June — the equivalent of just three months of imports.

Kuwait offered $4 billion in cash, loans and fuel, with Saudi Arabia contributing $5 billion and the United Arab Emirates another $3 billion.

But Cunningham warned that, while welcome, the cash injection was not a long-term solution.

“We’re still talking plasters and bandages. The challenges are enormous and they are structural. Egypt’s economy has been badly managed for decades, and it didn’t improve under Morsi.”

Illustrating the severity of the problem, the latest data from Egypt’s official statistics agency shows that unemployment jumped after Mubarak’s ouster and then rose steadily over the next two years to reach a record 13.2 percent in March.

Problems Egypt’s new rulers will have to confront if they are to reverse the inexorable decline include corruption, poor education, a bloated public sector, low productivity and unsustainable food and fuel subsidies.

“They need to fix the entire system,” said Ahmed Galal, head of the Eco Research Forum.

“It’s going to be difficult to do, but it’s doable, with a lot of dedication,” he told AFP, adding that stability and appointing a competent government will be crucial if Egypt’s economic woes are to be resolved.

This week Hazem al-Beblawi, a former finance minister and accomplished economist with long experience of working with international financial institutions, was named prime minister.

But his task of forming a national unity government was immediately complicated by Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood rejecting any offer of jobs in the new cabinet.

US intelligence firm Stratfor believes the instability goes far beyond political divisions.

It said growing poverty and joblessness, “arguably among the root causes of the uprising in 2011”, was part of a “swelling trend” that motivated the recent protests.

“It is possible that the new government will find …read more

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In Cairo, Morsi loyalists keep the faith

Tens of thousands of Mohamed Morsi’s loyalists rallied in Cairo Friday, praying for the return of Egypt’s first elected president whose whereabouts remained secret more than a week after the military ousted him.

Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood had called the rally in Rabaa al-Adawiya, a square in northern Cairo, where supporters have staged a defiant sit-in since his July 3 overthrow in a popularly backed coup.

With the onset of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the Islamist’s supporters have turned to prayers as well as numbers in the hope of reinstating the former president.

“God is enough for us, and he is our best custodian,” the protesters chanted.

“We are here to deliver a message to the military that we won’t give up legitimacy,” said Ashraf Fangari, referring to Morsi’s election victory in June 2012.

“We will fight for our rights,” said the government employee.

Just last month, the Islamists were officially in charge of the country, after decades of persecution led to the 2011 uprising against Hosni Mubarak and Morsi’s subsequent election.

But they now find themselves isolated and loathed by the millions of Egyptians who rallied to demand Morsi’s ouster — before the military complied with a swift coup.

In Cairo’s Tahrir Square and outside the presidential palace, thousands of Morsi’s opponents also gathered on Friday after calls for rival rallies.

Morsi’s divisive 12 months in power, after winning the election with an unimpressive margin, and his ouster have polarised the country to levels unseen in years.

“I’ll leave as a dead body,” said Mohamed Yousry, a teenager at the rally.

“We will defend Morsi with our blood.”

Dozens of people were killed in the days leading up to and after Morsi’s overthrow.

In the deadliest violence, at least 53 people, mostly Morsi supporters, were killed on Monday in clashes outside an army building where they believed Morsi is being held.

“The military will respond to our demands,” firebrand preacher Safwat al-Hegazi told the protesters on Friday.

“We won’t leave here until our president, Mohamed Morsi, comes back,” added Hegazi, who is wanted by police for questioning on the suspicion that he has incited violence.

With much of the public solidly against him, Morsi has little chance of returning to the presidential palace.

His current whereabouts are a mystery after his detention by the military following his ouster, as is his legal fate.

Authorities have suggested he might face trial on several charges, including insulting the judiciary which was largely hostile to him.

But in Rabaa al-Adawiya, his supporters still have faith.

“I am sure Morsi will return to his position. All injustice comes to an end,” said Ibrahim Mohamed, a student from the Nile Delta who came to Cairo for the rally.

…read more

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Thousands rally to push goals of Egypt's uprising

Thousands of Egyptians demonstrated across the country to denounce the president and purse the goals of the 2011 popular uprising.

Saturday’s protests marked the fifth anniversary of the formation of the April 6th Youth Movement started in 2008 under former President Hosni Mubarak. Workers in Mahalla tore down a poster of Mubarak in what was a daring move at the time.

The group also played a crucial role in the uprising that toppled Mubarak.

The movement initially backed President Mohammed Morsi in election run-offs last June, but has since turned against him.

The opposition accuses him of acting like his autocratic predecessor and of not having an inclusive political process. Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood party says Morsi should be challenged at the ballot box, not in street protests.

…read more

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Egypt's president praises police despite criticism

Egypt‘s president has commended the country’s police force in the face of public criticism over its violent response to demonstrations.

Mohammed Morsi told riot police their courage and sacrifice are needed. He warned them against breaking ranks.

Part of the force is on strike to protest what some officers see as an attempt by Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood to control them. The Brotherhood denies that.

Speaking at a riot police camp on Friday, Morsi told members of the black-clad force to be aware of Egypt‘s enemies abroad who want to see the country divided.

Egypt‘s riot police have been engaged in violent confrontations with protesters. A government report obtained this week by The Associated Press concludes that police were behind nearly all the killings of protesters during the country’s 2011 uprising.

…read more
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Kerry presses Egypt president, military on reform

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is wrapping up a visit to deeply divided Egypt with an appeal for unity and reform to the country’s president and military chief.

A day after warning the country’s bickering politicians they must overcome differences to get Egypt‘s faltering economy back on track and maintain its leadership role in the volatile Middle East, Kerry was bringing a similar message on Sunday to President Mohammed Morsi and his defense minister. The U.S. is deeply concerned that continued instability in Egypt will have broader consequences in a region already rocked by unrest.

Opponents of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood say they will boycott upcoming parliamentary elections and violent clashes between protesters and security forces have created an environment of insecurity, complicating Egyptian efforts to secure vital international aid.

…read more
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Egypt's vote won't calm turbulent streets

Egypt‘s streets are turning into a daily forum for airing a range of social discontents from labor conditions to fuel shortages and the casualties of myriad clashes over the past two years.

Parliamentary elections called over the weekend by the Islamist president hold out little hope for plucking the country out of the turmoil. If anything, the race is likely to fuel more unrest and push Egypt closer to economic collapse.

“The street has a life of its own and it has little to do with elections. It is about people wanting to make a living or make ends meet,” said Emad Gad, a prominent analyst and a former lawmaker.

Islamist President Mohammed Morsi called for parliamentary elections to start in late April and be held over four stages ending in June. He was obliged under the constitution to set the date for the vote by Saturday.

His decree brought a sharp reaction from Egypt‘s key opposition leader, Nobel Peace Laureate Mohamed ElBaradei, who said they would be a “recipe for disaster” given the polarization of the country and eroding state authority.

On Saturday, ElBaradei dropped a bombshell when he called for a boycott of the vote. An effective boycott by the opposition or widespread fraud would call the election‘s legitimacy into question.

But in all likelihood, Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood and its ultraconservative Salafi allies will fare well in the vote. The Brotherhood has dominated every election in the two years since the 2011 uprising that ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

The mostly secular and liberal opposition will likely trail as they did in the last election for parliament’s lawmaking, lower house in late 2011 and early 2012 — a pattern consistent with every nationwide election post-Mubarak.

President Morsi’s Brotherhood-dominated administration has been unable to curb the street protests, strikes and crime that have defined Egypt in the two years since the uprising.

In fact, the unrest has only grown more intense, more effective and has spread around the country in the nearly eight months that Morsi has been in office.

On any given day, a diverse variety of protesters across much of the troubled nation press demands of all sorts or voice opposition to Morsi and the Brotherhood.

…read more
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Egypt's Morsi calls parliament elections in April

Egypt‘s Islamist President Mohammed Morsi has issued a presidential decree calling for staggered parliamentary elections, starting April 27 and ending in June.

The decree, announced late Thursday, says the vote will take place in four stages and the new parliament will convene on July 6.

Since the ouster of longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak in a popular uprising in 2011, Egyptians have gone through a series of referendums, presidential and parliamentary elections. The first elected parliament was disbanded by a court order last June.

Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood has emerged as the country’s dominant political group.

The call for the balloting comes as Egypt is in deep turmoil, bitterly divided between the fundamentalist Brotherhood and their backers on one side, and secular liberal political parties and youth groups on the other.

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Egypt: Islamists rally in Cairo against opposition

Several thousand mostly hard-line Islamists protested in Cairo on Friday against a recent wave of violent anti-government protests, while liberal activists staged a smaller demonstration across town to call for accountability and justice from the country’s leaders.

The parallel rallies mirror the deep divisions that have plagued Egypt in the two years since longtime autocrat Hosni Mubark‘s ouster, leaving the country’s politics polarized and its economy battered by the continuous turmoil in the streets.

The current cycle of unrest erupted three weeks ago around the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Mubarak. The opposition-led protests against Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, who was elected in June, accusing him and his Muslim Brotherhood group of trying to monopolize power.

The opposition also wants Morsi to amend a contentious constitution that was passed in a nationwide vote late last year after the president’s Islamist allies rushed to finalize and approve the document in a drafting committee. The president and his backers counter that the opposition’s relentless protests calling for reform have hurt the country’s ailing economy and made actually implementing changes impossible.

On Friday, some 5,000 Morsi’s supporters gathered in front of Cairo University for a rally, dubbed “No to violence.” The protest is largely seen as a denunciation of the anti-government demonstrations in recent weeks that have frequently turned violent, leaving more than 70 people dead.

“I would like to tell the people who are attacking the police by throwing firebombs at them that this is unacceptable,” said protester Mahmoud Mamdouh. “These are our people and these buildings that are getting destroyed are our property.”

Some of the demonstrators Friday held banners that read: “People want an iron fist” and “Yes to Islamic law.” Others chanted “People want the law of God to be implemented.”

The rally was organized by Gamaa Islamiya, an ex-jihadist group whose members were imprisoned for decades under the former regime. The group’s political party only won a small number of seats in last year’s parliamentary elections, but has a widespread network of supporters across Egypt.

The demonstration was not expected to reach massive numbers because Egypt‘s most powerful Islamist parties are not officially participating. Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood backers said they will only have a symbolic presence at the protest while the more conservative Salafi parties weren’t taking part, although some leaders were present.

Many of the protesters held the Koran and waved pictures of Morsi and Omar Abdel-Rahman, the 73-year-old blind sheik who was the spiritual leader of the Gamaa, as well as one of the men convicted in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. He has been serving a life sentence in the United States since 1995.

Across town, a smaller crowd of liberal activists rallied outside the Qasr al-Kobba palace, one of the president’s secondary palaces. It is considered symbolic like the main palace where clashes between police and protesters have been taking place for weeks.

Friday’s protest, which does not officially include the main opposition coalition, was led mostly by youth who waved pictures of protesters killed in past demonstrations. Much of the anger …read more
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Egypt's government condemns death fatwas

Egypt‘s prime minister has condemned religious edicts by hardline Muslim clerics calling for the killing of opposition leaders and says the government is considering legal action against them.

The state news agency says Hesham Kandil warned on Thursday that such fatwas could lead to “sedition and disturbance.”

A day earlier, Egypt‘s most prominent opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the National Salvation Front, criticized the government‘s silence over the edicts. A security official says ElBaradei’s home has been put under observation for his protection.

In one edit, ultraconservative cleric Mahmoud Shaaban said the Front’s leadership is “setting Egypt on fire to gain power, and the verdict of God’s law against them is death.”

Al-Azhar, the Sunni Muslim world’s premier Islamic institution, and Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood group also condemned the fatwas.

…read more
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Egyptian protesters, police clash at President's palace in 8th day of political violence

Egyptian protesters throwing stones clashed with security forces firing tear gas and water cannons at the presidential palace in Cairo on Friday as the country’s political violence extended for an eighth day.

Protests were held in cities around the country on Friday after a call for rallies by opponents of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. But some cracks appeared in the ranks of the opposition as some sharply criticized its political leaders for holding their first meeting with the rival Muslim Brotherhood a day earlier.

Around 60 people have been killed in protests, rioting and clashes that engulfed the country the past week in country’s worst crisis since the 2011 fall of autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Around 6,000 protesters massed outside Morsi’s presidential palace in an upscale district of the capital, banging on the gates and throwing stones and shoes into the grounds in a show of contempt. At least one firebomb was thrown through the gates as crowds chanted, “Leave, leave,” addressing Morsi.

Security forces inside the palace responded with water cannons on the crowd, then fired volleys of tear gas. A tree inside the palace grounds caught fire.

Thousands more rallied in central Tahrir Square, while a larger crowd marched through the Suez Canal city of Port Said, which witnessed the worst clashes and highest casualties, pumping their fists in the air and chanting, “Leave, leave, Morsi.”

The wave of protests began around rallies marking the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Mubarak. The unrest was prompted by public anger that Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood are monopolizing power and have failed to deal with the country’s mounting woes.

But outrage has been further fueled by Morsi’s public backing of what was seen as security forces’ use of excessive force against protesters last weekend, particular in Port Said, where around 40 people were killed.

Amid the escalating tensions the past week, there have been fears of direct clashes between Morsi’s opponents and his Islamist backers. Such battles broke out at the palace in December during an earlier wave of unrest, when Islamists attacked an anti-Morsi sit-in, prompting fighting that left around 10 dead.

A Brotherhood spokesman, Ahmed Arif, underlined on Friday that the group would not call its cadres into the streets. But a young Brotherhood member said the group’s members were ordered to gather in a mosque near the presidential palace, as a “precautionary measure” in case anti-Morsi protests turned violent. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

The government, meanwhile, has increasingly blamed violence on a group of protesters called the Black Bloc, who wear black masks and have vowed to “defend the revolution.” Officials and state media depict them as conspiratorial saboteurs, but the opposition says authorities are using the group as a scapegoat to justify a crackdown.

Nearly 20 masked protesters are among hundreds arrested around the country the past week. Egypt‘s official news agency said on Thursday that a member of the Black Bloc was arrested with “Israeli plans” and maps to target vital institutions — recalling past allegations by Mubarak-era security officials that opponents were carrying out Israeli interests.

“There’s a great deal of exaggeration concerning the Black Bloc group,” said Gamal Fahmy, an opposition figure. “It hasn’t been proven that the group has committed violence, these are just calls over the social media.”

“This is an attempt from the Muslim Brotherhood to blackmail the opposition,” by depicting the anti-Morsi movement as violent, he said.

The eruption of violence prompted Morsi last Sunday to declare a state of emergency and curfew in Port Said and two other Suez Canal cities, where angry residents have defied the restrictions with nightly rallies.

Thousands marched on Friday through Port Said, located at the Canal’s Mediterranean end, pumping their fists and chanting, “Leave, leave, Morsi.” They threatened to escalate pressure with civil disobedience and a work stoppage at the vital Suez Canal authority if their demand for punishment of those responsible for protester death is not met.

“The people want the Republic of Port Said,” protesters chanted, voicing a wide sentiment among residents that they are fed up of negligence and mistreatment by central government and that they want to virtual independence.

Buses brought protesters from the two other Suez Canal cities of Suez and Ismailia to join the Port Said rallies.

Friday marked the first anniversary of a mass soccer riot in Port Said that left 74 people dead, mostly fans of Al-Ahly, Egypt‘s most popular soccer team, which was playing a local Port Said team, Al-Masry.

The past weekend’s violence in Port Said was sparked when a court convicted 21 people, mostly locals, in the soccer deaths, a verdict residents saw as unjust and political. Over the next few days, around 40 people were killed in the city in unrest that saw security forces firing on a funeral.

Egypt‘s main opposition political grouping, the National Salvation Front, called for Friday’s protests in Cairo, demanding Morsi form a national unity government and amend the constitution, moves they say would prevent the Islamist from governing solely in the interest of his Muslim Brotherhood group.

“The policies of the president and the Muslim Brotherhood are pushing the country to the brink,” the opposition said in a statement.

However, the call came a day after the Front held a meeting with Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood under the aegis of Egypt‘s premier Islamic institution, Al-Azhar, in their first ever meeting. They and other politicians signed a joint statement denouncing violence.

The meeting appeared to have caused rifts within the opposition, with some saying the Front had handed the Brotherhood the high ground by signing a statement that seemed to focus on protester violence and made no mention of police use of excessive force or explicitly talk of political demands.

“Al-Azhar’s initiative talks too broadly about violence as if it’s the same to kill a person or break a window and makes no difference between defensive violence and aggressive violence, offering a political cover to expand the repression, detention, killing and torture by the hands of police for the authority’s benefit,” read a joint statement by 70 activists, liberal politicians, actors and writers.

“The initiative didn’t represent the core of the problem and didn’t offer solutions but came to give more legitimacy to the existing authority,” it added.

Those who attended the Thursday’s rare meeting between Egypt‘s rival political camps defended the anti-violence initiative.

Egypt‘s leading pro-democracy advocate Mohammed ElBaradei and a Front leader described allegations that the Front is making political compromises them as “intentional attempt to split the ranks.”

“We toppled down Mubarak regime with a peaceful revolution. We insist on achieving the goals the same way whatever the sacrifices and the barbaric suppression tactics,” the Nobel peace Laureate tweeted.

Ahmed Maher, co-founder of April 6 group which led the anti-Mubarak uprising, said in a tweet: “I am against violence as a solution.” An opposition party leader Ahmed Said said in a statement, “no one can say no to an initiative to stop violence.”

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Egyptians march in fresh protests nationwide

Thousands of Egyptians marched across the country, chanting against the rule of the Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, in a fresh wave of protests Friday, even as cracks appeared in the ranks of the opposition after its political leaders met for the first time with the rival Muslim Brotherhood.

The protests continue a week of political rioting that engulfed the country and left up to 60 people dead. The violence prompted Morsi to declare a state of emergency in three restive Suez Canal cities, impose a curfew that thousands of the cities’ angry residents defied in night rallies, and left him with eroding popularity in the street.

On Friday, thousands of protesters in the Mediterranean city of Port Said at the northern tip of Suez Canal, which witnessed the worst clashes and biggest number of causalities the past days, pumped their fists in the air while chanting, “Leave, leave, Morsi.” They threatened to escalate pressure with civil disobedience and a work stoppage at the vital Suez Canal authority if their demand for punishment of those responsible for protester death is not met.

“The people want the Republic of Port Said,” protesters chanted, voicing a wide sentiment among residents that they are fed up of negligence and mistreatment by central government and that they want to virtual independence.

“Your policy is: I don’t hear, I don’t talk and I don’t see,” read a flyer distributed by protesters.

Buses carrying protesters from two other Suez Canal cities of Suez and Ismailia carried more protesters to the Port Said rallies.

Last week’s violence first erupted on the eve of the second anniversary of 2011 uprising that toppled down longtime authoritarian ruler Hosni Mubarak‘s regime. It accelerated a day later when security forces fired at protesters killing at least 11 dead, most of them in the city of Suez.

The next day, riots exploded in Port Said after a court convicted and sentenced to death 21 defendants — mostly locals — for a mass soccer riot in the city’s main stadium a year ago. Residents saw the verdict as politicized. Over the next few days, around 40 people were killed in the city in unrest that saw security forces firing on a funeral.

Feb. 1 marks the first anniversary of the mass soccer riot in Port Said that left 74 people dead mostly fans of Al-Ahly, Egypt‘s most popular soccer team.

Egypt‘s main opposition political grouping, the National Salvation Front, called for Friday’s protests in Cairo, demanding Morsi form a national unity government and amend the constitution, moves they say would prevent the Islamist from governing solely in the interest of his Muslim Brotherhood group.

“The policies of the president and the Muslim Brotherhood are pushing the country to the brink, but they are adopting the same language of the old regime and accusing their opposition of betrayl,” the opposition said in a statement. “Instead of responding to the street demands, and working with the rest of the national forces that contributed in the revolution to rescue the nation, they are pointing their arrows to media to stifle freedoms,” it added

However, the call came a day after the Front held a meeting with Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood under the aegis of Egypt‘s premier Islamic institution, Al-Azhar, in their first ever meeting. They and other politicians signed a joint statement denouncing violence.

The meeting appeared to have caused rifts within the opposition, with some saying the Front had handed the Brotherhood the high ground by signing a statement that seemed to focus on protester violence and made no mention of police use of excessive force or explicitly talk of political demands.

“Al-Azhar’s initiative talks too broadly about violence as if it’s the same to kill a person or break a window and makes no difference between defensive violence and aggressive violence, offering a political cover to expand the repression, detention, killing and torture by the hands of police for the authority’s benefit,” read a joint statement by 70 activists, liberal politicians, actors and writers.

“The initiative didn’t represent the core of the problem and didn’t offer solutions but came to give more legitimacy to the existing authority,” it added.

Those who attended the Thursday’s rare meeting between Egypt‘s rival political camps defended the anti-violence initiative.

Ahmed Maher, co-founder of April 6 group which led the anti-Mubarak uprising, said in a tweet: “I am against violence as a solution.” An opposition party leader Ahmed Said said in a statement, “no one can say no to an initiative to stop violence.”

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Egyptians gather in Tahrir square to mark uprising anniversary

Egyptian opposition protesters are gathering in Cairo’s Tahrir Square to mark the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak‘s autocratic regime.

The protesters, mostly led by liberals and secularists, are using the anniversary to stage a show of strength in a bid to force President Mohammed Morsi to amend a disputed constitution drafted by his Islamist allies. They are also demanding freedom of expression and the independence of the judiciary.

Hundreds of thousands are expected to turn out for the rallies planned in Cairo and several major cities. Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist groups are staying off the streets to avoid clashes.

Friday’s rallies come a day after opposition protesters battled police for hours near Tahrir. The clashes injured scores of opposition protesters.

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Egypt president tries hand at Palestinian rivalry

Egypt‘s Islamist president has stepped into a bitter Palestinian rivalry, meeting separately with leaders of the factions.

Mohammed Morsi first talked to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Wednesday. He had a meeting set for later with Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal.

Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood is the parent organization of Hamas.

The two Palestinian groups have been at odds since Hamas overran Gaza in 2007, ousting forces from Fatah, which Abbas leads. Many efforts to end the split have failed over the years.

In a sign that the equation may be changing with the Brotherhood’s rise to power in Egypt, for the first time Hamas allowed thousands of Fatah backers to rally in Gaza last week.

In 2011, Mashaal and Abbas signed a reconciliation agreement, but it was not implemented.

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Analysis: Egypt's Islamists tighten grip on power

With the passage of a divisive constitution, Egypt‘s Islamist leadership has secured its tightest grip on power since Hosni Mubarak‘s ouster nearly two years ago and laid the foundation for legislation to create a more religious state.

The opposition’s response — a vow to keep fighting the charter and the program of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi — ensured that the turmoil of the past two years will not end as many, especially the tens of millions of poor craving stability, had fervently hoped.

“The referendum is not the end game. It is only a battle in this long struggle for the future of Egypt,” the opposition National Salvation Front said in a strongly worded statement on Sunday.

“We will not allow a change to the identity of Egypt or the return of the age of tyranny,” added the front, which claims the new constitution seeks to enshrine Islamic rule in Egypt and accuses the Islamists of trying to monopolize power.

Critics say the new constitution does not sufficiently protect the rights of women and minority groups and empowers Muslim clerics by giving them a say over legislation. Some articles were also seen as tailored to get rid of Islamists’ enemies and undermine the freedom of labor unions.

Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt‘s most powerful political organization in the post-Mubarak era, claimed early Sunday that the charter it had backed was approved in the two-stage vote with a 64 percent “yes” vote overall. Though official results will not be announced until Monday, there is little doubt they will confirm the passage.

Once the official result is out, Morsi is expected to call for a new election of parliament’s lawmaking lower house within two months.

And if all of the elections since Mubarak’s February 2011 ouster are any predictor, Islamists will again emerge dominant. In the last parliamentary vote in late 2011, the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies the Salafis — ultraconservative Islamists — won about 70 percent of seats.

If Islamists win the overwhelming majority again, there is nothing to stop their lawmakers from legislating in support of their longtime goal of turning Egypt into an Islamic state. The Salafis will likely seek to enlist the support of the less radical Brotherhood for legislation that would nudge Egypt closer to a religious state.

Khalil el-Anani, a British-based expert on Islamic groups, said the Salafis are likely to insist that every piece of legislation conforms with Islamic Shariah law, especially with regard to questions of morality, culture, personal freedoms and the nation’s identity.

“The Salafis will want the Brotherhood to reward them for their campaigning for the ‘yes’ vote,” said el-Anani. “The Brotherhood, meanwhile, will want to rebuild their image as a credible democratic group after a period in which it seemed in complete alignment with the Salafis.”

The Islamists could also move early to pass laws restricting vibrant and outspoken privately owned media organizations that have flourished since the uprising and reported critically on Morsi and the Brotherhood.

Egypt analyst Michael W. Hanna said, however, that enduring political tensions will make it difficult for the Islamists to push ahead with any major or sensitive legislation.

“There will be a huge domestic backlash to any unpopular legislation, especially when it comes to the economy or the media,” said Hanna of New York’s Century Foundation.

Until the lower house is elected and seated, parliament’s upper chamber, the Shura Council, will temporarily assume legislative powers and may give priority to more pressing issues.

After the opposition brought hundreds of thousands of protesters to the streets in the past four weeks, including tens of thousands outside Morsi’s presidential palace in Cairo, the Shura Council is expected to hurriedly debate and vote on a legislation that would place tight restrictions on the right to demonstrate.

More serious challenges to Morsi’s leadership may lie ahead. The millions who voted “yes” for the constitution are hoping for stability, jobs and business opportunities that may be slow in coming.

The president will soon have to introduce painful economic reforms to salvage a deal with the International Monetary Fund for a $4.8 billion loan that was delayed at Egypt‘s request because of the political turmoil of the past month.

A glimpse of what may be in store on that front emerged Sunday after Prime Minister Hesham Knadil met with the Cabinet’s economic team.

“The current financial and economic situation is in grave danger,” said Cabinet spokesman Alaa el-Hadidy. “Leaving things the way they are is not something we can afford to do,” he said, hinting at the necessity of structural reforms. These will include price and tax hikes as well as lifting subsidies on fuel.

Morsi recently rescinded a package of price and tax hikes hours after he decreed them, saying he did not want to burden poor Egyptians with a higher cost of living. But economists say it is only a question of time before the package is re-introduced.

With foreign currency reserves around half of what they were two years ago and tourism revenues hard hit by resurgent political turmoil, the economy has been in a free-fall for months. Deepening the nation’s economic plight is the seemingly endless series of strikes and demands for salary increases and better benefits.

Price hikes, warn many analysts, could prove to be the last straw for the nearly half of Egypt‘s 85 million people who live around the poverty line of surviving on $2 a day.

Many Egyptians want to see Morsi’s government moving aggressively to tackle the nation’s pressing problems such as security and reviving the vital tourism sector.

“We want factories to work again so we can find jobs here instead of traveling abroad to find work,” said Mohammed Sweilam, a metal worker who spent seven years working in oil-rich Saudi Arabia. “When stability prevails, I will consider coming home to stay. Let us give the Brotherhood a chance. We owe them this,” he said as he waited in line on Saturday to cast his vote in the town of El-Saf in Cairo’s neighboring Giza province.

Another pressing issue for the new legislators may be the anti-Islamist editorial policy of the independent media, particularly privately owned TV networks whose political talk shows are watched nightly by millions and shape public perceptions.

Already, Morsi’s allies have been filing numerous complaints against media celebrities who criticize or mock the president and the Brotherhood, including hosts of satirical shows and newspaper columnists. Several of them are on trial or being investigated on charges of “insulting” the president or undermining national security.

Since Morsi took office nearly six months ago, Brotherhood members or sympathizers have been named editors of most of the roughly 50 state-owned publications. The powerful information minister is a prominent Brotherhood leader.

A recent court ruling also shut down a TV network whose owner is a harsh critic of Morsi. Salafis who support Morsi have been staging a sit-in outside a media complex in Cairo for weeks to protest against what they say is the anti-Islamist policies of private TV networks housed there.

The constitutional crisis has re-energized and united the once-fractured opposition, turning it into a force to be reckoned with in the fight over Egypt‘s future. In a sign of its newly found strength, the National Salvation Front, the main opposition group, on Sunday scornfully rejected a Brotherhood invitation for dialogue.

The opposition has dismissed the constitution as the fruition of an illegitimate process.

The low turnout for the referendum — 32 percent of the more than 51 million eligible voters, or 20 percent of Egypt‘s 85 million people, according to unofficial results — has shown the limitations Islamists face in marketing an Islamic state in a nation still largely loyal to secular traditions.

Morsi could be tainted by allegations of voting violations instigated by Islamists and reported by rights groups. The charges could cast doubt on the democratic credentials of the Islamists and lead to damaging analogies between Morsi’s administration and Mubarak’s authoritarian regime, which oversaw massive electoral fraud for years.

The opposition is demanding an investigation of alleged wrongdoing in the vote.

The Brotherhood insisted violations were limited and should not affect the referendum’s integrity.

But prominent lawyer and rights activist Negad Borai described the violations as systematic.

“What happened in the referendum could lead to violence and bloodshed if repeated in a parliamentary election when the stakes are higher,” he warned.

___

Hendawi is the Associated Press chief of bureau in Cairo.

Source: Fox World News

Egypt's opposition gears up for new protests over Islamist-backed draft constitution

Egypt‘s opposition alliance is gearing up for mass rallies across the country on Tuesday to protest a highly contentious Islamist-backed draft constitution and to denounce violations that they claim were rife during a first round of voting on it.

Since the country’s current political crisis erupted more than three weeks ago, the opposition has kept the pressure on the government of President Mohammed Morsi with mass marches that at times have seen turnouts of hundreds of thousands. The Islamists have organized rival rallies.

Tuesday’s planned protests in front of the presidential palace and in Cairo’s Tahrir Square as well as other city centers around the country are the first major push by the opposition since Saturday’s round of the referendum on the constitution, in which preliminary results showed that 56 percent of voters had cast “yes” ballots. The next round of voting is schedule for Saturday, Dec. 22.

Islamists have suggested that passage of the constitution will give them a mandate, but the opposition says the process has been rushed, turnout has been low, and irregularities in the voting has been rife. They say that the constitution requires more than a simple majority, and many have called for the referendum voting to be re-held. The Brotherhood says the country’s Elections Committee can adjudicate any complaints.

The protests also follow closely on new salvos in the conflict between Morsi and the judiciary: one top group of courts announced its boycott of the second round of referendum voting, while the embattled Morsi-appointed Prosecutor General Talaat Abdullah submitted his resignation.

Abdullah had come under fire from fellow prosecutors who accused him of pressuring a judge not to release some 130 anti-Morsi protesters from detention.

The vote on Egypt‘s post-revolution constitution comes against a backdrop of deep polarization that split the country’s political forces into two camps: one led by Islamists including Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood group and ultraconservative Salafis, and the second led by the National Salvation Front, an alliance of liberal and left-leaning political parties and youth groups backed by Christians and many Muslims who are skeptical of the Brotherhood.

For many, a decree by Morsi on Nov. 22 brought the simmering conflict between Egypt‘s newly empowered Islamists and political opposition and judiciary, to the open. The “constitutional declaration” gave Morsi’s decisions immunity from judicial oversight and protected the Islamist-dominated Constituent Assembly, whose predecessor had been dissolved by court order.

Morsi subsequently rescinded the decree but the protests set the scene for a new round of confrontation over the constitution. The drafting panel passed the draft in a marathon session on Dec. 1.

Liberal members, Christians’ representatives and others long criticized the Islamist domination of the process, particularly the insertion of clauses that they say pave the way to a religious state and threaten civil liberties. They say the breakneck pace of its drafting and passage will only polarize the country further.

The Brotherhood deny this, arguing that the passage of the constitution will be a much-needed boost for political stability.

Preliminary results show that the “yes” vote carried the first round by a margin of 56 percent. Rights groups and opposition say they filed complaints of violations marring the vote, including judges who they intentionally stalled the vote in constituencies anticipated to oppose it. They also say judges, whose supervision is required by law in Egyptian elections, were replaced by court employees in some districts to replace judges who boycotted the vote.

But one prominent judicial body that did involve itself in the first round of voting, the State Council, says that it will boycott the second round in protest at the alleged irregularities. The Council provided 1,500 of the 7,000 judges involved in the first round.

Many top Brotherhood officials have consistently characterized their critics as holdovers from the era of deposed president Hosni Mubarak. Most top judges are Mubarak-era appointees but the National Salvation Front is largely made of the Mubarak-era opposition, and Morsi’s critics also include some Islamists.

On Monday, Egypt‘s Supreme Constitutional Court — the country’s most prestigious tribunal that is at the center of the Brotherhood’s conflict with the judiciary — denounced a statement by a Morsi aide in which it discussed the court under a “campaign” by “anti-revolutionary forces” to “overturn the gains of the revolution” against Mubarak.

Court spokesman Maher Sami accused Essam el-Haddad’s of “tarnishing” the court’s image and criticized him for writing the memo in English.

“The Supreme Constitutional Court is asking why the president’s aide chose to address the foreign media,” he said. He added el-Haddad aimed at “toppling down the court’s reputation internationally” and that the “crime of spreading false and instigating news that is punishable by law.”

Source: Fox World News

Egyptians vote on contested draft constitution

Egyptians were voting Saturday on a proposed constitution that has polarized their nation, with President Mohammed Morsi and his Islamist supporters backing the charter, while liberals, moderate Muslims and Christians oppose it.

With the nation divided by a political crisis defined by mass protests and deadly violence, the vote on the disputed charter has turned into a choice between moving Egypt closer toward a religious state led by Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood and the ultraconservative Salafi bloc, or one that retains secular traditions and an Islamic character.

“The times of silence are over,” said bank employee Essam el-Guindy as he waited to cast his ballot in Cairo’s upscale Zamalek district. “I am not OK with the constitution. Morsi should not have let the country split like this.”

El-Guindy was one of about 20 standing in a line for men waiting to vote. A separate women’s line had twice as many people. Elsewhere in Cairo, hundreds of voters began queuing outside polling stations nearly two hours before the voting started at 8 a.m.

“I read parts of the constitution and saw no reason to vote against it,” said Rania Wafik as she held her newborn baby while waiting in line. “We need to move on and I just see no reason to vote against the constitution.”

Critics are concerned about the charter’s legitimacy after most judges said they would not supervise the vote. Rights groups have also warned of opportunities for widespread fraud, and the opposition says a decision to hold the vote on two separate days to make up for the shortage of judges leaves the door open for initial results to sway voter opinion.

More than 26 million voters are scheduled to cast their ballots Saturday, while another 25 million will vote next week. Saturday’s vote is held in 10 provinces, including Cairo and the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, the country’s second largest and scene of violent clashes on Friday between opponents and supporters of Morsi.

Egypt‘s latest crisis, the worst since longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak was ousted in a popular uprising nearly two years ago, began when Morsi issued a decree on Nov. 22 giving himself and the assembly writing the draft immunity from judicial oversight so the document could be finalized before an expected court ruling dissolving the panel.

On Nov.30, the document was passed by an assembly composed mostly of Islamists, in a marathon session despite a walkout by secular activists and Christians from the 100-member panel.

If the constitution is approved by a simple majority of voters, the Islamists empowered when Mubarak was ousted would gain even more clout. The current upper house of parliament, dominated by Islamists, would be given the authority to legislate until a new parliament is elected.

If the constitution is defeated, elections would be held within three months for a new panel to write a new constitution. In the meantime, legislative powers would remain with Morsi.

The opposition has called on its supporters to vote “no,” while Morsi’s supporters say the constitution will help end the political instability that has gripped Egypt since the autocratic Mubarak was overthrown. Clerics, from the pulpits of mosques, have defended the constitution as a document that champions Islam.

Morsi’s opponents say minority concerns have been ignored and the charter is full of obscurely worded clauses that could allow the ruling Islamists to restrict civil liberties, ignore women’s rights and undermine labor unions.

“At one point in our history, Cleopatra, a woman, ruled Egypt. Now you have a constitution that makes women not even second-class but third-class citizens,” said businesswoman Olivia Ghita. “This constitution is tailored for one specific group (the Muslim Brotherhood). It’s a shame. I am very upset.”

Source: Fox World News