I would listen to the Robert Fisk interview. The military are very unlikely to give away their power.
Egypt's new president wants closer ties with Iran
Egypt's new president wants closer ties with Iran
Egypt's
Islamist President-elect Mohammed Mursi says he wants to expand ties
with Iran to create a strategic balance in the region.
25
June, 2012
Diplomatic
relations between the two countries have been severed for more than
30 years, but both sides have signalled a shift in policy since
former president Hosni Mubarak was overthrown last year in a popular
uprising.
Mohammed
Mursi's victory over former general Ahmed Shafik in Egypt's first
free presidential election has been hailed by Iran as the final phase
of an "Islamic awakening".
Mainly
Sunni Muslim Egypt and predominantly Shi'ite Iran are among the
biggest and most influential countries in the Middle East, but they
have had no formal ties since 1980, following Iran's Islamic
revolution and Egypt's recognition of Israel.
Mr
Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood won the presidential election in
Egypt by a margin of less than 900,000 votes.
Mr
Mursi won 51.7% of the vote, beating former Prime Minister Ahmed
Shafiq by a margin of less than 900,000 votes.
The
annnouncement by the head of the electoral commission, Farouq Sultan,
on national television on Sunday sparked wild celebrations in Tahrir
Square, where huge cheers erupted.
Across
Cairo, cars sounded their horns amid crowds chanting "Mursi,
Mursi".
The
armed forces were on high alert ahead of the announcement due to
fears of violence breaking out.
Supporters
of Mr Shafiq, who were holding a rally in the capital's northern
suburb of Nasser City, were stunned by the result.
There
was screaming and crying and people were seen holding their heads in
despair.
The
electoral commission said Mr Mursi won 13,230,131 votes (51.73%),
compared with Mr Shafiq's total of 12,347,380, or 48.27%.
The
turnout in last weekend's voting was 51.58%.
Mr
Mursi, 60, won the first round ballot in May with almost a quarter of
the vote. He has pledged to form an inclusive government.
The
Supreme Council of Armed Forces will retain control of the army. Mr
Mursi has said he will respect international treaties.
Mr
Mursi replaces President Hosni Mubarak who was deposed in February
last year.
Unity promise
Mr
Mursi on Sunday hailed a "historic day" for the nation and
said he would be a president for all Egyptians.
He
thanked God and "the blood, tears and sacrifices" of his
fellow countrymen.
"Today
I am a president for all Egyptians, wherever they may be," he
said.
"Thanks
to our unity and our love for each other, we will able to make a
respectable future for ourselves."
''Egypt,
our beloved homeland, needs our unity," he said in a speech
broadcast by state television on Sunday.
"The
revolution continues until all its goals are achieved. Together we
continue the journey."
He
saluted the "martyrs of the revolution". But he also
praised the army and police, who many Egyptians see as playing
negative roles over the past year.
Mr
Mursi also promised to preserve all international treaties.
"We
come in peace," he said.
Brotherhood background
One
of the issues Mr Mursi will have to address is the Muslim Brotherhood
party's relationship with the interim military council that recently
curbed the powers of the presidency by decree.
The
BBC reports he resigned on Sunday from his positions within the
organisation - including his role as chairman of its Freedom &
Justice Party - as he had pledged to do in the event of his victory.
The
Muslim Brotherhood was founded by Hassan al-Banna in the 1920s.
It
has influenced Islamist movements around the world with its model of
political activism combined with Islamic charity work.
The
Brotherhood was banned after a failed attempt to assassinate
President Gamal Abdul Nasser in 1954.
The
BBC reports it became the main opposition force in Egypt in 2000,
when its members won 17 seats in the People's Assembly.
Five
years later, the organisation and its allies won 20% of the seats.
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