In Egypt, It's Beginning To Look Like 2011 All Over Again
Erin
Cunningham, GlobalPost
30
November, 2012
CAIRO,
Egypt — Tens of thousands of Egyptians poured into Cairo’s Tahrir
Square Friday in the latest protests against newly-elected Muslim
Brotherhood President Mohamed Morsi.
At
one of the largest protests yet against Morsi’s five-month rule,
demonstrators in the iconic plaza waved anti-Brotherhood signs and
chanted against the leader, who they say is taking the country back
toward dictatorship. Morsi made presidential decree on Nov. 22 that
gave him broad powers immune from judicial review.
In
the same breath, anti-Morsi protesters also voiced opposition to the
Brotherhood-dominated constitutional committee that last night rammed
through a draft constitution that lacked the support of Egypt’s
Coptic Church and many secular representatives.
In
a marathon session that ended in the early hours of Friday morning,
the members of the Morsi-allied constituent assembly voted in a new
constitution that the New York-based Human Rights Watch says offers
only mixed support of key social and political rights.
The
document does curb executive power, including limiting the number of
presidential terms to two, and Morsi had vowed to scrap his new
authority once a new constitution was ratified. The charter still
needs to be put to a national referendum.
But
Tahrir Square protesters, many of whom fought in Egypt’s 18-day
uprising nearly two years ago to remove the autocrat Hosni Mubarak,
were unmoved by the provisions. Many said said they did not believe
Morsi would concede power.
“Egypt
is going down a very dangerous path and right now we have two
choices: an Islamic dictatorship or freedom and democracy,” said
48-year-old financial manager, Sayed Al Sherbine, in Tahrir.
Suspicion
of the powerful Brotherhood organization that supported Morsi’s
presidential campaign also ran deep.
“Islam
is a religion of democracy and freedom — and the Muslim
Brotherhood does not represent Islam,” Al Sherbine said. “They
only represent themselves.”
The
current impasse began on Nov. 22 when Morsi announced the edict that
granted him sweeping authority. Many observers said the move was a
bid to guard the pro-Islamist assembly from potential dissolution by
an upcoming Supreme Constitutional Court ruling on the body’s
legality. The ruling by the court, which critics say is dominated by
Mubarak-era judges, could have again upended Egypt’s already rocky
transition to democratic rule.
Earlier
this year, the court dissolved a Brotherhood-led parliament, as well
as a previous constituent assembly that was stacked with Islamists.
Brotherhood
officials say Morsi’s maneuvers were meant to head-off a greater
battle with the judiciary.
Because
Egypt’s elected parliament was dissolved in June, legislative
authority is now vested in the president.
But
the result has been growing and vocal opposition to what anti-Morsi
demonstrators see as an attempt by the president and his Islamist
allies to consolidate power, roll back rights and sideline
minorities.
Many
protesters in Tahrir admitted to not having read the new
constitution, but said they were more concerned with the conditions
under which it was passed in the assembly.
Of
the 85 assembly members that voted Thursday, none were Christians and
only four were women, all Islamists, according to the Associated
Press. Rights groups say while the document contains strong
provisions against human rights violations like torture and arbitrary
detention, for example, it fails to protect women’s rights.
“The
main reason why the constituent assembly should have been dissolved
by the court is that it is not politically or socially
representative,” said Ziad Akl, a senior researcher at the
Cairo-based Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies. “It
simply means that the constitution is a continuation of the rule of
the [Islamist] majority.”
In
Tahrir, the epicenter of the popular revolt that ousted Mubarak,
protesters called on Morsi to rescind his decree and form a new
constituent assembly that represents broader sections of Egyptian
society, including non-Islamists, women and religious minorities.
“We
were against this assembly from the beginning,” said 32-year-old
Abu Bakra Mahmoud, a teacher in Cairo. “The constitution was
cooked,” he said, adding that he believed it was manufactured
through a series of backroom deals among the Islamist parties.
“We
will keep coming to Tahrir and we will keep protesting.”
Beyond
protesting, it remained unclear what both demonstrators and secular
opposition groups planned to do to continue to pressure Morsi. Some
vowed to stage a sit-in at the square, while other political parties
said they were drawing up demands for the president.
“We
are giving him a warning to leave power or we will make him leave by
force,” said a 59-year-old male teacher, but who did not want to
give his name. “He doesn’t represent us. It’s like the
revolution never happened.”
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