Egypt´s military takes bigger role in constitution (AP) Associated Press) By SARAH EL DEEB, CAIRO, EGYPT 04/16/12 4:43 pm ET)
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CAIRO – Egypt´s ruling military has inserted a new element of
confusion even as Egypt tries to sort out turmoil surrounding its
upcoming presidential elections. The generals now insist a new
constitution be written before a new president is seated, a rushed
timeframe that some fear may prolong their hold on power.
For weeks, the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists sought to
dominate the writing of the country´s first new constitution since
the fall of President Hosni Mubarak more than a year ago. But after
Islamist domination of the process sparked a backlash of criticism,
the military has stepped back in to take a more direct role.
The military´s new assertiveness has split the national debate. Some
liberals have welcomed the military´s weight to counteract the
increasing power of Islamists. Others, however, worry that the
generals aim to continue their control over Egypt beyond their
promised deadline for handing over power to a civilian president by
the end of June.
In a meeting Sunday, the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
urged heads of political parties, including the Brotherhood, to
finish writing the country´s constitution before the election of a
new president, now set for May 23-24.
The generals did not directly say the election would be delayed if
the constitution is not finished, according to Mustafa el-Naggar, who
attended the meeting. But few believe the document can be written and
approved by a referendum in that timeframe.
"My feeling is something is just not right," said Muslim Brotherhood
spokesman Mahmoud Ghozlan. "This is too foggy ... Is there a desire
to find a pretext to extend the transitional period?"
El-Naggar´s Al-Adl Party warned that pushing back elections would
open the door for "mayhem that threatens the country´s security ...
It is a coup against the democratic transition. The people won´t
accept anyone ruling them without an election."
The election has already been marred by confusion after the
commission overseeing the process on Friday disqualified 10 of the 23
would-candidates from the race, including the top three hopefuls. The
three — the Muslim Brotherhood´s Khairat el-Shater, former
intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, and ultraconservative Islamist
Hazem Abu Ismail — all submitted their appeals on Monday.
The election commission is expected to decide Tuesday which appeals
will be reviewed, and a final list of candidates will be released
April 26, just under a month before the vote.
The process for writing the constitution has similarly been thrown
into turmoil, fueling doubts it can be finished quickly. A panel
created by parliament is supposed to draw up the document. Last
month, the Brotherhood and other Islamists, who hold 70 percent of
parliament´s seats, formed a 100-member panel dominated by Islamists,
provoking an outcry that they were trying to control the process.
A court suspended that panel, and now the military is mediating a new
attempt to form a new one. The parliament must still vote on the
final makeup.
Khalil el-Anani, an expert on Islamist groups, said the Brotherhood —
buoyed by its victories in parliamentary elections late last year —
overreached in grabbing power, fanning fear from many among many
Egyptians, and opened the door for the military to step in.
"The Brotherhood made a huge miscalculation and now is dealing with a
grave loss in the last round of its struggle with the military
council," for power, he said.
Many of the liberal parties "don´t have a problem with the
supervision of the military so long as they rein in the Islamists,"
said el-Anani. He said that by suggesting that a constitution must be
written first the generals "created more uncertainty and more
division."
At stake in the constitutional debate are the powers and privileges
the president and the military will retain in the new Egypt. The
military aims to enshrine in the constitution its special say in the
country´s political life and protection of its widespread business
interests.
Last year, it tried to push guidelines for the constitution writing
that would preserve its status, including an exemption from civilian
oversight of its budget. At the time, back in November, the Muslim
Brotherhood, backed by a number of revolutionary forces, challenged
the military´s document with large rallies, forcing it to withdraw
the suggestions.
But times are different now. Many liberals now fear the Brotherhood
more than the military, after the group won nearly 50 percent of
parliament, sought to dominate the constitutional process and decided
to run a candidate for the presidency, fueling a perception that they
are hungry for power.
As a result, some liberal parties have said the military should now
guide the constitution writing process.
Reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei, who pulled out from the presidential
race saying it lacked transparency, said a constitution can´t be
written in one month. ElBaradei, who has been a proponent of a longer
transition that starts with writing the constitution, wrote on his
Twitter account that "the travesty" of "bungled" transition
continues.
"Now the military council wants the revolution´s constitution written
in one month. Don´t belittle the importance of the constitution.
Egypt deserves better than this."
But some among the revolutionary youth groups that led the uprising
last year against Mubarak oppose letting the military run the
process.
Ahmed Imam, a member of the National Front for Justice and Democracy,
said Islamist and secular groups must unite against the military to
ensure the revolution´s goals of overhauling the country´s
authoritarian rule.
"If the Brotherhood don´t side with the revolution and clearly, they
will exterminated and then we will be after them," he said. (© 2012
The Associated Press 04/16/12)
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