Morsi
calls power extension 'temporary' as Egyptians swarm streets in
protest
RT,
A protester runs as he returns a tear gas canister to the riot police in Tahrir, Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Protesters run from the riot police during clashes at Tahrir square in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
A protester returns a tear gas canister to the riot police in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Protesters run from the riot police during clashes at Tahrir square in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
A protester returns a tear gas canister to the riot police in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
A protester kneels during clashes in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Injured protesters help each other escape from the tear gas fired by the riot police in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
RT,
25
November, 2012
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi has stressed the “temporary nature” of a
controversial decree issued Thursday extending his powers beyond
oversight by any body. In an official statement, Morsi said he wants
to begin dialogue with political forces.
"This
declaration is deemed necessary in order to hold accountable those
responsible for the corruption, as well as other crimes, during the
previous regime and the transitional period," the
statement said.
Just
hours before the statement was announced, police used tear gas to
disperse protesters in Cairo, in the third consecutive day of
anti-Morsi demonstrations.
Officers
stormed a sit-in on Tahrir Square as demonstrators gathered to join
with dozens of activists that had spent the night in tents to protest
the Egyptian president.
A protester runs as he returns a tear gas canister to the riot police in Tahrir, Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
But
the chaos isn’t just taking place on the streets – a third
adviser to the president resigned from his post on Sunday over the
declaration, as the country’s stock market plummeted.
Morsi
met with his remaining advisors and assistants earlier Sunday, to
discuss the fallout from the controversial decree.
On
Sunday Ahmed Fahmi, chairman of the Islamist-dominated Shura Council
and a leading member of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and
Justice Party, made a surprising statement condemning the decree.
The
declaration “has
severely divided the nation into Islamists and civilians," Fahmi
said. He urged Morsi to conduct a national dialogue with all forces,
with an eye to putting an end to the crisis triggered by the decree.
On
Saturday, prominent Muslim Brotherhood Leader Mohamed Abdel-Qodous
also condemned the decree.
"I
am sorry Mr President. Despite my membership of the Brotherhood, I am
a son of the revolution for freedom and I reject the move giving you
absolute power, regardless of the reasons behind it or how long it
will be in place," Abdel-Qodous
said on Twitter.
Egypt’s
Judges Club has also spoken out against the declaration, calling it
a “ferocious
attack on Egyptian justice.”Following
the decree, the group called for judges to go on strike. On Sunday,
the Supreme Judicial Council called for those judges to return to
work, Al Arabiya reported.
Another
judges caucus, Judges for Egypt, has rallied in support of the
declaration. Morsi is soon expected to call a meeting with judges.
“The
situation in Egypt is polarized and there’s fragmented politics.
There was a buildup to this tension, with Gaza and Morsi’s lack of
imaginative approaches for Gaza – which were no better than
Mubarak’s,” Middle
East analyst Amro Ali told RT.
But
the leader did manage to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza
on Wednesday. And it’s that ceasefire that many say gave him the
confidence to give himself absolute power.
“The
ceasefire has given him an aura of international legitimacy, and the
[$4.8 billion] IMF loan has empowered him to continue with his
reforms,” Ali
said.
As
supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood continue to back the leader,
Ali says the party isn’t nearly as powerful in urban areas as
it is in rural ones – and therefore lacks major influence in many
strategic parts of the country.
“The
Muslim Brotherhood is better at mobilization. It’s not good at
public opinion. And the fact that it has to bus in its members from
other parts of Egypt means that its strength does not lie in the
urban heartlands,” he
said.
As
the protests and political turmoil continue, it appears the situation
won’t be fixed overnight.
“It’s
a big, confusing mess and as someone who reads up a lot on this, it’s
really hard to say where it’s going at this point in time,” Ali
said.
Meanwhile,
a number of Egyptian state TV channels disappeared from the airwaves
Sunday evening, leaving many to fear possible media censorship.
"The
connection was broken by sources outside Egypt. Investigations are
ongoing to determine the source [of the disconnection]," managing
director of NileSat, Salah Hamza, told Ahram Online.
Protesters run from the riot police during clashes at Tahrir square in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
A protester returns a tear gas canister to the riot police in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Protesters run from the riot police during clashes at Tahrir square in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
A protester returns a tear gas canister to the riot police in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
A protester kneels during clashes in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
Injured protesters help each other escape from the tear gas fired by the riot police in Cairo November 25, 2012 (Reuters / Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
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