Egyptian
ministers resign in wave as Army deadline nears
Egyptian
foreign minister Kamel Amr became the sixth minister to tender his
resignation from the Morsi government on Monday. Amr follows the
ministers for tourism, environment, communications and legal affairs
and water utilities.
RT,
2
July, 2013
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Egypt’s
state news agency MENA reported that millions have staged
demonstrations against President Mohamed Morsi’s government since
Sunday. Prior to Amr’s resignation, the other four ministers had
stated that their move came as an act of “solidarity with the
people’s demand to overthrow the regime.”
Mourad
Ali, a spokesman for the ruling Muslim Brotherhood party, said the
government has rejected a 48-hour deadline imposed by Egypt’s army,
during which time Morsi’s government is intended to reconcile with
protesters and end widescale public unrest. According to a report by
AlHayat TV, Ali said that the armed forces has no right to set
ultimatums for the country’s government.
The
ultimatum calls on the Morsi government to “meet the demands of the
people” by Wednesday evening or face the military’s intervention
in restoring order. The statement, which was broadcast nationwide on
radio and television media, the military referred to its deadline as
“a final chance to shoulder the burden of a historic moment in our
country.”
Tourism
minister Hisham Zazou had first offered his resignation only last
month, following the appointment of Adel al-Khayat, a member of an
islamist party, as governor of Luxor. That particular group has been
linked to the murder of tourists in that city. Khayat later resigned
his position.
Zazou,
along with Communications and IT Minister Atef Helmi, Minister for
Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Hatem Bagato, Environment Minister
Khaled Abdel-Aal and Water Minister Abdel Qawy Khalifa together
submitted their letters of resignation to Prime Minister Hisham
Qandil.
Egypt’s
interior ministry estimated the number of protesters on Sunday to be
between 14 and 17 million. The mass rallies were the culmination of
frustrations over what those at the demos said was Morsi’s failure
to tackle a serious economic situation as well as continuing security
problems since assuming office a year ago.
In
Cairo the official building of the Muslim Brotherhood was set ablaze
just after crowds had stormed and looted the building. The interior
ministry said that eight people had been killed in the violence on
Sunday
From
earlier -
Egypt
army gives Mursi 48 hours to share power
Egypt's
armed forces handed Islamist President Mohamed Mursi a virtual
ultimatum to share power on Monday, giving feuding politicians 48
hours to compromise or have the army impose its own road map for the
country.
1
July, 2013
A
dramatic military statement broadcast on state television declared
the nation was in danger after millions of Egyptians took to the
streets on Sunday to demand that Mursi quit and the headquarters of
the ruling Muslim Brotherhood were ransacked.
The
generals' intervention was greeted with delight among protesters in
the streets - and muted dismay by Islamists.
Since
the fall of Hosni Mubarak as the Arab Spring revolutions took hold
more than two years ago, the Arab world's most populous nation has
remained in turmoil, arousing concern among allies in the West and in
neighboring Israel, with which Egypt has had a peace treaty since
1979.
Mursi's
allies were angry: "The age of military coups is over,"
said the Brotherhood's Yasser Hamza. Mohamed El-Beltagy said
Islamists would take to the streets to show their strength. Mursi
himself did not respond all day.
Crowds
in Cairo's Tahrir Square cheered when a flight of military
helicopters swooped overhead trailing national flags. Silhouetted
against the sunset, it was a powerful illustration of the military's
desire to be seen in tune with the people.
"If
the demands of the people are not realized within the defined period,
it will be incumbent upon (the armed forces) ... to announce a road
map for the future," the chief of staff, General Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi, said in the statement. It was followed by martial music.
The
people had expressed their will with unprecedented clarity in the
mass demonstrations, he said, and wasting more time would only
increase the danger of division and strife.
The
army said it would oversee the implementation of the road map it
sought "with the participation of all factions and national
parties, including young people," but it would not get directly
involved in politics or government.
Mursi's
office said later the president met Sisi and Prime Minister Hisham
Kandil, releasing a picture of them seated together smiling, but did
not respond to the military statement.
Anti-Mursi
demonstrators outside the presidential palace cheered the army
statement, and the main opposition National Salvation Front, which
has demanded a national unity government for months, applauded the
military's move. Spokesman Khaled Dawoud made clear there would be no
talks with Mursi - he must quit and, once the 48 hours were up, they
would deal with Sisi.
On
Tahrir Square, thousands celebrated the army's move with a fervor
that recalled its unsentimental removal of Mubarak at the end of 18
days of protests and bloodshed: "We want a new armed forces
council to govern until new elections," said accountant Mohamed
Ibrahim, 50. "The army alone supports the legitimate
revolutionary will of the people."
Amr
Moussa, a liberal politician and former foreign minister who stood in
last year's presidential election, said, "The invitation to meet
the demands of the people within the next few hours is a historic
opportunity which should not be lost."
It
was the second time in just over a week that the armed forces had
issued a formal warning to the politicians, piling pressure on Mursi
to concede power-sharing.
Analysts
said the military intervention could serve Mursi if he wished to
compromise, but it risked emboldening his opponents to harden their
demands, at the risk of triggering a coup.
"The
ultimatum has the ring of a potential coup," said Yasser
al-Shimy of the International Crisis Group think tank.
"What
makes it not a coup is it gives time for the politicians to sort out
their differences."
The
second biggest Islamist group in parliament, the Nour Party, said it
feared the return of army rule "in a big way" and urged
Mursi to compromise with his opponents.
A
later military statement denied the move was a "coup" and
was only a response to the "pulse of the Egyptian street."
The
armed forces have influenced Egyptian politics since army officers
staged the overthrow of the monarchy in 1952.
They
also receive significant funding from the United States, whose top
military officer, General Martin Dempsey, called the chief of staff
of Egypt's armed forces on Monday morning, a U.S. defense official
told Reuters, without giving details of the conversation.
SELF-DEFENCE?
After
the destruction of its offices, the Brotherhood, which operated
underground until the overthrow of Mubarak in 2011, said it was
considering how best to defend itself.
Mursi
supporters congregated near a Cairo mosque that has been their focus
for the past 10 days. Some were bitter at the irony of liberal
leaders embracing the army.
"The
world always thought we Islamists didn't believe in democracy,"
said Hassan al-Sherbeny. "Now Islamists are teaching Egyptians
democracy while the liberals are giving up democracy.
"And
where is the world's reaction to all that?"
In
a formal joint response to Sisi's statement, Islamist groups
including the Brotherhood were careful not to criticize the army
itself, instead saying that their political opponents were trying to
manipulate it in a way that would lead to a coup.
Five
non-Brotherhood government ministers tendered their resignations from
the Cabinet, apparently in sympathy with the protesters, underlining
a sense of isolation for the party that won a series of elections
last year but has failed to build out alliances to form a broader
consensus.
"Both
sides are still in their trenches," a senior European diplomat
said just before the military statement.
Eight
people died in a night of fighting around the Brotherhood
headquarters, where guards fired on youths hurling rocks and fire
bombs. A Brotherhood official said two of its members were hurt.
Eight other people were killed and 731 injured in clashes around the
country on Sunday.
Unknown
attackers also fire bombed the headquarters of the moderate Islamist
Wasat party allied with the Brotherhood. The party called in a
statement for dialogue among all parties.
Security
sources said security forces arrested 15 bodyguards of Brotherhood
deputy leader Khairat El-Shater after an exchange of gunfire with
them outside his home. The guards are suspected of illegal possession
of firearms used in the shooting at the movement's headquarters, the
sources said.
The
Brotherhood's political wing denied the arrests, saying only Shater's
driver had been "kidnapped".
The
Brotherhood's official spokesman told Reuters that the attack on its
headquarters had crossed a red line of violence and among possible
responses might be to revive "self-defense committees"
former during the 2011 uprising.
"The
people will not sit silent," Gehad El-Haddad said.
Mursi's
movement complained about the lack of police protection, which can
only heighten its sense of being under siege from both the liberal
opposition and state officialdom inherited from the old government.
NOT
TALKING
Mursi,
who has not appeared in person, earlier renewed offers via allies of
dialogue and pledged to work with a new parliament if disputes over
election rules can be ironed out. But he has so far offered no
substantial concessions.
The
opposition does not trust the Islamist movement, which critics accuse
of using a series of electoral victories to monopolize power. They
want a total reset of the rules of a democracy imperfectly worked out
over the past two years.
The
massive protests showed that the Brotherhood had not only alienated
liberals and secularists by seeking to entrench Islamic rule, notably
in a new constitution, but had also angered millions of Egyptians
with economic mismanagement.
Tourism
and investment have dried up, inflation is rampant and fuel supplies
are running short, with power cuts lengthening in the summer heat and
motorists spending hours fuelling cars.
The
cost of insuring government debt against default surged to record
highs. Forward contracts indicated a significant fall for the pound
against the dollar.
Some
uniformed policemen marched among protesters in Cairo and Alexandria,
chanting, "The police and the people are one," and several
senior officers addressed the Tahrir Square crowd. An independent
police association said it stood with demonstrators and would not let
them down.
The
United States and the European Union have urged Mursi to share power
with the opposition, saying only a national consensus can help Egypt
Storming
the Muslim Botherhood HQ
Egyptian
protesters again stormed the Muslim Brotherhood headquarters in Cairo
after a night of massive protests. Witnesses reported ransacking of
the HQ, including throwing things out of the windows and leaving with
furniture and other items. There were no Brotherhood members inside
the building, AFP reported.
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