Egypt: Military woos anti-Islamic forces and West
- BY DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
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Illegal
rulers and international frauds behave alike. Military rulers of Egypt are
slowly developing cold feet even while they use brutality to stay in power. Popularity
of ousted President Mohammad Mursi has been mounting. Facing
unrelenting pressure from Muslim Brotherhood protesters as well as
world leaders, including president Obama, Egypt's military bosses now
controlling Egypt by arrogant means, sought to justify their illegal
ousting of a popularly elected president Mohammed Mursi as well
his arrest, saying that the Islamist leader had “violated” his
popular mandate and antagonized state institutions.
Bur
the military in no mood to listen to world leaders
or Brotherhood and it wants to rule Egypt by all means for at
least a few months. Continuing its crackdown on the Brotherhood leadership,
Egypt's new chief prosecutor ordered frozen the assets of Muslim Brotherhood
leader Mohammed Badie and at least 13 other senior members of the group pending
investigations into violence outside the organization's headquarters in Cairo
and the Republic Guard forces club.
Military
is busy in putting in place a temporary government even as the designated
interim prime minister pushed ahead with talks to form a new Cabinet this week.
Meanwhile,
the military-backed government pressed forward with its transition plan.
ElBaradei, a 71-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner, was sworn in as vice
president for international relations, although his exact mandate was not
clear. The CIA backed former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency,
the U.N. nuclear watchdog based in Vienna, returned home to assume a role in
the anti-Mubarak uprising and, when failed to snatch and assume power,
this guy became one of the most visible leaders in the badly fractured Egyptian
liberal and secular opposition to Morsi's government.
Khaled
Dawoud, a spokesman for the National Salvation Front, a coalition of largely
secular groups, said ElBaradei was no longer the head of the umbrella
organization.
Designated
Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi also met with a number of candidates for his
new Cabinet. Others expected on the roster are Mohammed Mukhtar Gomaa — who
works in the office of the head of the top learning institute in the Muslim
Sunni world Al-Azhar — as head of the religious endowment ministry. Gomaa, who
also heads the faculty of Islamic and Arabic studies in Al-Azhar university,
was seen as nod to moderate Islam.
In
order to placate the western leaders, military want to switch
premiers and now chose as vice president
and foreign minister a former IAEA chief Mohd ElBaradei who
has been waiting to take over ever since uprisings reached the high pitch
and Mubarak was thrown out. ElBaradei was sworn in
as Egypt's interim vice president for international relations on 14 on July
Sunday the Church day. Military approached several secular-minded candidates to
lead the foreign, finance, culture, information and other key ministries. Nabil
Fahmy, who served as Egypt's former ambassador to the United States for over a
decade under Hosni Mubarak, was tapped to be foreign minister, according
to state media.
The
fast-track transitional timetable included also appointing two panels to amend
the constitution passed under Morsi. Those changes would be put to a referendum
within about 4 1/2 months, followed by parliamentary elections and the
presidential elections.
Violence
in the aftermath of Morsi's ouster peaked a week ago when the military opened
fire on Brotherhood supporters who were holding a sit-in outside the Republican
Guard forces club, leading to hours of clashes. More than 50 protesters were
killed and hundreds wounded. The Brotherhood claimed the military
opened fire on protesters, while the army says it was responding to Morsi
supporters trying to storm the Republican Guard building.
The
move is to reinforce anti-Islamic forces and non-Islam liberals who are
strongly opposed to the Brotherhood. The United States has called for Morsi's
release. Since his ouster, Morsi has been held incommunicado at an undisclosed
location.
Morsi's
election came after months of turmoil following the 2011 revolution that
removed autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak from office, in a rocky transition that
was marred by persistent protests, political disagreements and an economy
teetering on bankruptcy. The military staged a coup in a bid to undermine the
rising influence of Islamists, and thousands have camped out for days near a
mosque in eastern Cairo to demand he be reinstated.
The
Islamist leader Mursi was the first democratically chosen leader after a narrow
victory in elections last year. Many in the international community fear the
ouster of Morsi, Egypt's first democratically elected president would undermine
Egypt's transition to democracy.
President
Obama should not have recognized the illegal interim government in Cairo. But
the United States sent its No. 2 diplomat in the State
Department, William Burns, to Cairo to meet with interim government
officials as well as civil society and business leaders during his two-day
visit. The State Department said Burns would underscore U.S. support for
the Egyptian people and a transition leading to an inclusive, democratically
elected civilian government. El-Sissi said the armed forces acted to remove
Morsi on July 3 according to the “will of the people” as the country was
sliding toward deeper polarization and more violence. The military chief
el-Sissi said "the armed forces sincerely accepted the choice of the
people, but then political decision-making began stumbling. The armed forces
remained committed to what it considered the legitimacy of the ballot box, even
though that very legitimacy began to do as it pleased and in a way that
contradicted the basis and the origin of this legitimacy." The military
chief said he has a right t remove the elected president. He claimed he
frequently advised Morsi and finally reached out to him before giving him a
48-hour ultimatum to reconcile with opponents and address public demands. He
said he sent two envoys, including then Prime Minister Hesham Kandil and a
trusted legal expert, urging the president to hold a referendum on whether
voters still supported his presidency, but the suggestion was rejected out of
hand. El-Sissi appealed to all parties, in an apparent nod to Morsi's supporters,
to participate in the new transition, saying it is overseen by an unbiased
leader and will restore the right of people to choose.
The
Muslim Brotherhood spokesman Gehad el-Haddad responded to el-Sissi's remarks,
saying that the military had no right to act on behalf of the people of Egypt
except through "orders of their elected commander in chief," meaning
Morsi.
Brotherhood,
which propelled Morsi to power, has called for massive protests Monday to
escalate pressure on the military. Some Muslim Brotherhood leaders have called
for el-Sissi to be removed, and put on trial accusing him of treason.
Egyptian
crisis has spilt out into nearby nations. Freedom fighting “militant” groups in
Jordan have lashed out following the military ouster of Morsi, targeting police
stations and security checkpoints and vowing to drive the military out of the
area. In the past 10 days, at least eight security officers have been killed.
Christians in the area have also been targeted. Two Christians were killed, one
a priest. A gas pipeline to Jordan was bombed, ending a lull in such strikes.
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Observation
The
military also has no right to decide which protest is worthy enough to
represent the people. President Morsi was ousted by the military after four
days of protests by millions of his opponents.
Human
Rights Watch said it appeared that "the military and police used
unnecessary force" and that prosecutors have investigated only Brotherhood
supporters and leaders for their alleged roles in the clashes, but not security
forces. The army responded with lethal force that far exceeded any apparent
threat to the lives of military personnel.
Enemies of Islam say
Morsi "entered into a conflict with the judiciary, the media, the police
and the public opinion. Then (he) also entered into a conflict with the armed
forces." He didn't elaborate on the nature of the conflict with the
military, but said that comments about the military offended "and were
considered a stab to the national pride." the armed forces could no
longer stand on the sidelines as millions of Egyptians took to the streets to
call for the Islamist leader to step down over allegations he was abusing his
power.
Americans must
revise their constitutional law to include a new clause: whenever a
military take over happen s by ousting an elected government, the
US president of the time must step aside sympathizing with the
illegally removed leader from power to enable a speedy democratic
process starting in that country. Obama need not resign now without
amending the constitution, though that would be ideal to assure humanity of
peace. .
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