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USANews版 - Egypt's Brotherhood faces double backlash
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话题: military话题: egypt话题: panel话题: islamists
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By Staff, Associated Press
March 26, 2012
Members of Egypt's Parliament attend a session in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday,
March 24, 2012. Egyptian parliamentarians on Saturday cast ballots to select
a 100-member panel that will draft the country's new constitution, amid
deep polarization between liberals and Islamists over the process. (AP Photo
/Ahmed Gomaa)
CAIRO (AP) — Egypt's powerful Islamists on Monday faced a backlash on two
fronts as they try to solidify their hold on the country's politics, as
liberal politicians quit a panel tasked with drafting a new constitution to
protest its domination by Islamists.
More ominously, the ruling military issued a veiled threat of a crackdown on
the Muslim Brotherhood if the group persisted in demands to form a new
government.
The warning pointed to a growing possibility of confrontation between the
Brotherhood and the military, which emerged as Egypt's two most powerful
institutions since the fall of longtime authoritarian ruler Hosni Mubarak a
year ago. For months, they have moved between cooperating and jostling for
position.
But the Brotherhood appears to be growing in confidence over its position.
The group holds nearly half the seats in parliament, making it the largest
bloc — and its strength grows even more on some issues in which it is
backed by the second-largest bloc, the ultraconservative Islamic Salafis.
Together they have been demanding the ouster of the military-appointed prime
minister so they can form their own government. The military has staunchly
refused. They have also used their strength in parliament to create a
constitutional panel with an Islamist majority, giving them the strongest
hand in writing the new charter.
In response to the tensions with the military, the Brotherhood's leader,
Mohammed Badie, said in comments posted on the group's website Monday that
it was "quite possible" for the Brotherhood to reverse an earlier decision
not to field its own candidate in presidential elections due in May.
If the military-Brotherhood quarrel escalates, the transfer of power from
the military to a civilian president — scheduled for before July 1 — could
be in jeopardy. Their dispute could also hand the liberal and secular
groups that engineered the 18-day uprising that toppled Mubarak an
opportunity to move back to center stage after months on the side.
The independent Al-Shorouq daily said on Monday that several members of the
ruling military council have expressed their disapproval of the makeup of
the panel in a meeting with Brotherhood leaders. Brotherhood officials could
not be reached for comment, but the report was the latest in a series
published in the independent media suggesting that relations between the two
sides have become so strained that a rapprochement may not be possible any
time soon.
Two prominent liberal Egyptian politicians — independent lawmaker Amr
Hamzawy and Christian activist Mona Makram Obeid — were the first to
announce they were pulling out of the 100-member constitutional panel on
Monday.
Lawmaker Emad Gad said 11 other liberal politicians have also decided to
pull out and were due to formally announce their decision on Tuesday, a day
before the body is scheduled to hold its inaugural session. The group
include eight members of the panel and three "reserve" members, who would
serve if a member bows out for any reason. Gad is one of the three reserve
members pulling out.
"The entire process is a show to conceal the intention to draft a
constitution for a religious state," said Gad, a Christian. "It's a disgrace
to the constitution," Sherif Samir, a spokesman for the secular Free
Egyptians Party, said of the religious slant of the panel.
The controversy surrounding the panel's makeup drew a guarded reaction from
the United States, which has over 30 years regarded Egypt as a key partner
in the fight against Muslim militancy.
"We want to see a new constitution for Egypt that upholds democratic values
and universal human rights in all of their aspects and provides protections
and assurances for the participation and the rights of all Egyptians," U.S.
State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters in Washington on
Monday.
She said the panel has an "obligation to uphold and defend and protect the
democratic rights that brought them to power in the first place, including
the universal rights of all groups."
Selected over the weekend, the panel includes nearly 60 Islamists and only
six women and six Christians. The members were chosen by parliament's two
chambers, where Islamists have a comfortable majority of more than 70
percent.
"I polled those who elected me and the majority of them said they preferred
for me to stay on the constituent assembly," Hamzawy wrote. "I gave the
matter a great deal of thought and studied the makeup of the assembly. My
conscience told me to pull out."
Obeid, a former lawmaker and a prominent women's rights activist, said, "the
religious nature and the absence of women are behind my withdrawal from the
constituent assembly."
The new constitution will determine whether Egypt, a mainly Muslim nation of
some 85 million people, will become further Islamized. The charter also
will determine whether the decades-old system of a powerful president will
be maintained, or instead, an empowered parliament under Islamist domination
will set the tone.
The Brotherhood's spat with the military has its roots in the Islamists'
resolve to fire the military-backed government of Prime Minister Kamal el-
Ganzouri, a Mubarak-era politician who is nearly 80.
"The (ruling) military council bears full responsibility for attempts to
hinder the process of democratic transition and ... exporting crises to
future governments," said a statement by the Freedom and Justice Party, the
Brotherhood's political wing. The party also charged that the military might
try to rig the presidential election to install a favorable candidate.
The military hit back with a strongly worded statement on Sunday saying it
was unacceptable to question its commitment to turning over power to a
civilian government and to a fair presidential election.
It also made a thinly veiled threat of a crackdown against the group by
alluding to the mid-1950s, when the Brotherhood was outlawed and its members
detained after the group challenged the rule of the military.
"We ask everyone to learn from the lessons of history so we avoid the
mistakes of a past we don't wish to return to," the military statement said.
But the Brotherhood appeared to dismiss the warnings. One senior Brotherhood
figure, Essam Yassin, suggested times had changed and that the group had no
fear of the military.
"The hands of the clock never go back," he wrote on his Facebook page. "
Believers are never stung twice from the same snake pit."
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: military话题: egypt话题: panel话题: islamists