Showing posts with label Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Thousands Join Egypt Rally Called by Muslim Brotherhood

BBC: Thousands of people are gathering in Cairo's Tahrir Square to protest against a decision by the ruling military council to assume new powers.

The protests have been called by the Muslim Brotherhood, as it claims its candidate Mohammed Mursi won last weekend's presidential election.

His rival, former PM Ahmed Shafiq, also says he has won.

As Egyptians voted, the generals dissolved parliament and claimed all legislative power for themselves.

Correspondents say the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (Scaf) appears to be working on the assumption that Mr Mursi will win, and making moves designed to reduce or constrain the power of the president and entrench its own.

Activists have described the moves as a "military coup". » | Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Related »
The Storm Clouds Are Gathering Over Egypt

THE INDEPENDENT: When mass protests toppled Hosni Mubarak in February last year, Cairo's Tahrir Square swiftly became the emblem of the hopes of the Arab Spring. Sixteen months on, however – with the constitution still not written and soldiers guarding the doors of the parliament – the outlook for the Egyptian revolution is far from certain.

There were always going to be hiccups. After six decades of military rule, three of them under Mr Mubarak, dismantling the old power structures – the so-called "deep state" – could hardly be expected to run entirely smoothly. But all the signs suggest that the ruling military council is tightening its grip on power just as the time to relinquish it is approaching.

It is true that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) has restated its commitment to hand control to the new President at the end of this month as planned. But on Sunday night, a bare few hours after the polls closed, the council issued a constitutional declaration granting itself both sweeping legislative and budgetary oversight and also, crucially, the final say over who will draft the constitution that will set out the President's powers. » | Leading Article | Tuesday, June 19, 2012

THE INDEPENDENT: Mubarak's 300,000-strong army of thugs remains in business despite elections – The Long View: The military has played a shrewd game – insisting Mubarak go on trial while realigning supporters to preserve their privileges » | Roberts Fisk | Monday, June 18, 2012