Anti-military
crowds mass in Cairo's Tahrir
Tens
of thousands gather to protest disputed court rulings and moves by
military seen as attempts to cling to power.
23
June, 2012
Tens
of thousands of Egyptians have returned to Cairo’s Tahrir Square to
demand the rollback of what they see as politically biased court
decisions and military power grabs designed to throttle last year's
revolution and steal the presidential election.
The
mass protest and sit-in, initiated by the Muslim Brotherhood on
Wednesday night, was still growing on Friday night.
The
anti-military rally comes ahead of anxiously awaited results of a
runoff vote between the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohammed Morsi against
Ahmed Shafik, the final prime minister to serve under ousted
president Hosni Mubarak.
The
presidential election commission was due to release the election
results on Thursday, but it delayed its announcement, claiming it had
to deal with around 400 complaints from both campaigns.
On
Friday, the English website of state-owned newspaper Al Ahram cited
government sources who said Shafik would be declared the winner,
while the Arabic website cited election committee sources who said
Morsi was still in the lead.
The
Brotherhood has released photocopies of official counts from every
district in Egypt showing Morsi with a lead of around 900,000 votes,
but those results are not final until the election committee rules.
“The
internal arena is witnessing a state of wide controversy and concern
regarding the future of the country amid an atmosphere of doubts and
rumours pressing the public opinion,” the ruling Supreme Council of
the Armed Forces said in a statement on Friday.
“The
early announcement of presidential election results before they are
announced by the official body is unjustifiable, and it was one of
the main reasons for the division and confusion prevailing in the
political arena.”
'Critical
phase'
The
SCAF warned that “any attempts to harm public or private interests”
would be met with “utmost firmness and strength” by the security
forces.
The
statement was viewed as a broadside against the Brotherhood, which
has demanded the reversal of a Supreme Constitutional Court decision
dissolving parliament and the military’s election-night
constitutional declaration, in which the generals assumed legislative
powers and a veto over the new constitution.
The
military has refused both demands, and neither side has made
concessions.
Although
analysts believe negotiations continue behind the scenes, the
Brotherhood claims it has not talked with the generals since
Thursday, when high-ranking Brotherhood member and speaker of
parliament Saad el-Katatni met the SCAF to again state that the
movement rejected the dissolution of parliament.
On
Friday, the SCAF defended its constitutional declaration, which also
erased the president’s role as commander-in-chief and gave the
military autonomy over its own budget and personnel decisions.
"The
issuing of a constitutional declaration was a necessity imposed by
the needs of managing the affairs of the country during the current
critical phase of the history of our nation," the military
council said.
'Popular
will'
In
a press conference following the release of military’s statement,
Morsi said the Brotherhood wanted neither "confrontation nor
violence" but would "not allow anyone to tamper with the
result".
"We
expect that the result will truly reflect the popular will, which we
all know," Morsi said, adding that the protesters in Tahrir
Square were there to "guarantee that will" is respected.
He
also unveiled an unlikely alliance of well-known liberal, leftist and
secular groups that had allied with the Brotherhood after two days of
intense negotiations.
The
alliance reflected the deepening concern among pro-revolution forces
that whatever gains they might have earned from the 2011 revolt were
on the verge of being wiped out by the military.
Among
Morsi’s supporters were leftist April 6th movement founder Ahmed
Maher, former Google executive Wael Ghonim, young liberal leader
Shadi al-Ghazali Harb and prominent journalist Hamdi Qandil, who
previously worked with Mohamed ElBaradei’s National Movement for
Change.
ElBaradei,
though not present, was said to endorse the alliance with the
Brotherhood, as was Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, an ex-Brotherhood
Islamist who came in fourth in the first round of the presidential
election.
“We're
at the moment where we have to distinguish between political
difference and a blatant military coup,” Ghonim said, to applause.
“We won't act like in 1954, where some accept the death of
democracy if it’s bringing someone we do not want. This isn't a
stance with the Brotherhood but for democracy and legitimacy. Egypt
needs to forget differences.”
Harb
acknowledged that pro-revolutionary groups, particularly the youth,
had grown distrustful of the Brotherhood following months of protests
which the Brotherhood refused to join and perceived deals with the
military. But he said non-Islamists needed the Brotherhood, and the
Brotherhood knew it needed them.
“I
can promise if they isolate themselves again, they lose it forever,
this is their last chance,” he said.
'Down
with military rule'
On
Thursday, Shafik challenged Morsi's self-proclaimed victory and said
he was sure he had won.
In
his first appearance since the voting ended, Shafik told cheering
supporters that protesters’ “campaigns of terror and the media
manipulation are all attempts to force the election committee to
announce a particular result."
He
called for calm and unity, saying he would invite opponents to join
his administration.
"I
am fully confident that I will be the legitimate winner,” he said,
though his campaign has declined to provide proof.
At
Tahrir, the broad traffic interchange was filled with tents offering
shade from the scorching sun and hawkers offering an array of goods
from tea to "I Love Tahrir Square" t-shirts.
Large
groups of people were bussed in from the provinces by the Brotherhood
and other religious movements, and kiosks were arranged to sell
merchandise bearing the logo of the Brotherhood and its political
arm, the Freedom and Justice Party.
Mahmoud
Mohammed, a bearded 31-year-old marine engineer from Alexandria among
a group from the fundamentalist Salafist movement camping on the
square, told the Reuters news agency they were not looking for a
battle but wanted to see democracy installed.
"The
people elected a parliament and they put it in the rubbish bin. We
need the army to hand over," he said. "No one came here for
a fight. We need democracy."
The
deadlock between Egypt's two strongest forces has raised grave doubts
about prospects for consensual democracy, though some see possible
compromise if Morsi does become president.
Brotherhood
advisers have said they may accept the dissolution of parliament, and
their candidates are still likely to do well if elections are held
again.
But
high-ranking members of the movement have said that if the military
does not renegotiate its constitutional declaration, or if Morsi
loses the election by fraud, they are prepared to take to the
streets, raising the spectre of a return to the chaos and violence of
the 18 days that unseated Mubarak.
Both
the military and the Brotherhood are aware of the possible
consequences of such unrest, including deadly clashes between
protesters and security forces and the devaluation of the Egyptian
pound, and are likely keen to avoid it.
The
election commission has not said when it would announce the winner of
the runoff, but its secretary-general, Hatem Begato, told Al Ahram
that the winner would be announced on Saturday or Sunday.
Allegations
of fraud
The
commission said the announcement was postponed from Thursday because
a panel of judges must look into about 400 complaints of voting fraud
submitted by both campaigns, including lawyers for Shafik claiming
fraud in 14 of Egypt's 27 provinces.
The
lawyers said ballots sent to polling centers were already marked for
Morsi.
Morsi's
lawyers accused Shafik of buying votes and being involved in forging
lists of registered voters to include soldiers, who are barred from
voting, and names of the dead.
The
Brotherhood says it is being targeted by an organised campaign to
keep it out of the presidency, and that even if Morsi is declared the
victor, he will face deep resistance that will make it impossible for
him to govern.
After
two days of voting that ended on Sunday, the group declared Morsi won
52 per cent of the vote. Shafik's camp on Monday announced he had won
51.5 per cent of the vote.
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