Egypt: Mohamed Morsi calls December referendum on constitution
President
puts faith in popular vote to silence critics of government's
sweeping powers as about 50,000 rally in Cairo
Thousands
of Islamists take part in a rally in front of Cairo's
University in support of Egypt's President Mohamed Morsi. Photograph:
Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images
1
December, 2012
Egyptian
President Mohamed Morsi has announced a snap referendum on a new
constitution that has already deepened divisions in a country still
struggling to find its identity more than a year after it emerged
from Hosni Mubarak's rule.
Morsi,
who has triggered a fresh crisis in Egypt by assuming sweeping powers
and pushing the constitution through an Islamist-dominated assembly,
called the 15 December vote after tens of thousands of his loyalists
rallied in support of the document.
Opposition
leaders have condemned the constitution, saying its basis in Islamic
laws could undermine women's rights and freedom of speech. Mohamed
ElBaradei called it a violation of universal values and vowed that
the struggle against Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood would continue.
Earlier,
an estimated 50,000 people congregated near Cairo University, many
bussed in from the countryside to show their support for the
president and sharia law. Members of the president's Muslim
Brotherhood were joined by large numbers of their Salfi Muslim
allies.
"I'm
here to support Morsi's decree and the constitution. He is the first
elected president, and his decisions are all correct," said
protester Shaaban Hassan. Fellow protester Mustafa Abdel-Razak
stressed that it was a religious duty to support Morsi. "It's a
matter of religion, to support my custodian [Morsi]. It is
religiously decreed to support my custodian, as long as he does not
order us to sin."
Morsi's
decree and the resulting furore has repolarised Egyptian politics and
society. Opposition forces immediately took to the streets to decry
what they termed a dictatorial power grab, which granted Morsi
judicial immunity in all decisions and ringfenced the assembly given
the task of drafting the constitution.
Morsi
has insisted that the measures are temporary and will speed Egypt's
democratic transition.
However,
by giving himself extensive powers and putting his decisions beyond
judicial challenge he has pushed the country into fresh turmoil. His
assertion of authority in a decree issued the day after he won world
praise for brokering a Gaza truce between Israel and the Palestinian
Islamist Hamas movement dismayed his opponents.
Saturday
was the first showing of Islamist forces since the uproar began after
they cancelled a demonstration last Tuesday because it coincided with
opposition forces marching on Tahrir Square. Initially Saturday's
protest was scheduled for Tahrir Square, but was relocated to Cairo
University to avoid opposition protesters who were continuing a
sit-in.
In
an effort to defuse the crisis, and also avoid possible dissolution
by a supreme court ruling due on Sunday, the drafting assembly rushed
to finish in time for Morsi to ratify it and call the referendum. The
final draft drew criticism at home and abroad for its ambiguous
language, its weak and contradictory articles on human rights,
women's rights and civil liberties, and for the creeping sense of
religiosity. The assembly was also criticised for its homogeneous
nature after liberal and Christian members withdrew.
"We
fundamentally reject the referendum and constituent assembly because
the assembly does not represent all sections of society," said
Sayed el-Erian, 43, a protester and member of a party set up by
ElBaradei.
Privately
owned media announced a press blackout on Tuesday and Wednesday in
protest. Morsi's unilateral actions and refusal to back down have
dismayed secular opposition forces, who are adamant that he must
rescind these powers before a solution can be discussed.
"Morsi's
actions display a lack of wisdom," said university professor
Mustafa Kamel el-Sayed, who withdrew from the assembly drafting the
constitution because of the Islamist domination of the group.
"The
head of state should try to promote national reconciliation. And by
insisting on a course of action which is rejected by a considerable
number of Egyptians, the president is basing his power exclusively on
one political force, marginalising all others."
However,
Sayed Sabah Abdallah, a member of the Brotherhood's political arm,
the Freedom and Justice party, who was present at the pro-Morsi
rally, laid the blame of the current crisis squarely at the door of
the secular opposition.
"The
forces in Tahrir want to bring down this constitution because they
know we are the biggest organisational force in the country and that
we would sweep the parliamentary elections that must be held right
after the constitution is passed in the referendum," he said.
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