Sharif Abdel Kouddous reports from Egypt on the country’s growing political
crisis. Former President Hosni Mubarak is on life support, both candidates
claim to have won last weekend’s election, and the ruling military council
has seized greater power. Official presidential election results are not
expected to be announced until Thursday. Tens of thousands of Egyptians
protested Tuesday night in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in a rally called by the
Muslim Brotherhood, expressing outrage over the army’s decree late Sunday
that it would seize all legislative powers. "Right now the country has no
constitution, no parliament, and an incoming president that will have scant
power," Kouddous says. "So, really, the military council is controlling the
key branches of state. ... [It’s] perhaps a fitting end to this nonsensical
transition that we’ve seen over the last 16 months." [includes rush
transcript]
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/6/20/a_coup_in_cairo_as_muslim#transcript

*
NERMEEN SHAIKH:* We begin today’s show on the political crisis in Egypt.
Former President Hosni Mubarak has been moved from prison to an army
hospital in Cairo where he is reportedly unconscious and on life support.
The military strongman ruled the country for 30 years until he was toppled
from power during last year’s uprising. Earlier this month, he was
sentenced to life in prison for his role in the deaths of protesters.
Senior officers have given various accounts of the 84-year-old Mubarak’s
condition, but they denied reports he was, quote, "clinically dead," as
briefly reported by the state news agency.

The news comes amid high tension over the results from last weekend’s
presidential vote that pitted Mubarak’s former prime minister, Ahmed
Shafik, against Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood. Official results
are not expected to be announced until Thursday, but both sides have
already claimed victory.

Meanwhile, Egyptians showed little sympathy to news about Mubarak’s
deteriorating health.

*ADEL MORAD:* [translated] We do not need anything from him or his family.
We want them to leave us alone, because we’ve gotten tired of them. We are
looking forward for good people to rule us. We do not need anything from
his family. We want to live. We need security. We need a decent life. We
need freedom. And we need to retrieve our dignity.

*AMY GOODMAN:* Tens of thousands of Egyptians protested Tuesday night in
Cairo’s Tahrir Square in a rally called by the Muslim Brotherhood. Others
protested outside Egypt’s parliament. They expressed outrage over the
army’s decree late Sunday that it would seize all legislative powers. Some
have described the move as a "military coup." This is Egyptian parliament
member, Mhamed Uof.

*MHAMED UOF:* [translated] We should stream into the streets. I’m calling
on all free people from the army, police, all of the state associations,
and all of Egyptians who are brave and free people, to come to Tahrir
Square to protest. Hosni Mubarak stepped down after only 18 days. But the
military council will leave power only during nine days. We will hinder
traffic, close streets. We will do whatever it takes to achieve our
demands. It is going to be a civil, peaceful disobedience.

*AMY GOODMAN:* For more on the situation in Egypt, we go to Cairo, where
we’re joined by *Democracy Now!* correspondent Sharif Abdel Kouddous.

Sharif, can you tell us what’s happening, from what’s happening to Mubarak
right now, reported—reportedly in a coma, to what’s happening in the
streets, the reports of a military coup?

*SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS:* Well, this news of Mubarak’s health came in late
last night, the state news agency, as you reported, saying that he was
clinically dead. This caused, of course, a huge flurry in the media. But
quickly, those reports were denied by his lawyer, senior members of the
military council, who said he wasn’t clinically dead, that he had suffered
a stroke or he had suffered some kind of a heart attack, his heart had
stopped. There’s varying reports. What we do know is that he was
transferred out of the prison where he’s been held since he received his
life sentence earlier this month. He’s now in a military hospital. The news
has been, honestly, treated with some skepticism amongst the Egyptian
public here. I mean, Mubarak’s health and reports of his death have been
swirling in the media since the beginning of this revolution, especially
since he was taken into custody last year. We keep hearing rumors that he
died. And also, especially when he was moved to prison earlier this month,
immediately there were rumors that he had collapsed, that he was having
trouble breathing. But now he’s moved out of the Tora prison. Some think
that this was all just to get him out of the prison and back into a
hospital. So, that’s where—that’s where that stands right now.

But it comes at a very, very sensitive time. Tomorrow we’re going to learn
who the winner of Egypt’s first competitive—arguably
competitive—presidential election will be. Both sides have claimed victory
in the poll. The Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi has said that they won
with 52 percent of the vote to 48 percent of Ahmed Shafik. They’ve backed
this up with very detailed documents from each polling station around the
country, which are stamped. And their tally seems to coincide with most
independent reports and from most local media outlets. The Shafik campaign
has denied that he lost, saying instead that their candidate won. But we’ll
find out for sure tomorrow.

Over and above that is that what exactly—what powers will this president
have, and that really this handover of power that was scheduled for June
30th has really been rendered meaningless by a sweeping set of amendments
to the constitutional declaration that has been governing the country since
March of 2011. These amendments were issued unilaterally by the Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces and made public minutes after polls closed on
Sunday evening. And really, they entrench the military’s power, and they
strip the incoming president of any significant authority. And, of course,
we have to remember that these amendments come just three days after the
country’s top court, the Supreme Constitutional Court, dissolved the
popularly elected parliament and also after a decree by the Ministry of
Justice that really returns elements of martial law to Egypt and allows the
military widespread powers of arrest and detention of civilians.

So, most prominently, perhaps, of these constitutional amendments is that
it removes the president’s role as commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
It gives that to the head of the Supreme Council, who is Field Marshal
Hussein Tantawi, and effectively gives the military complete control over
its own affairs. So what this does, really, is creates the Supreme Council
of the Armed Forces as a fourth branch of state that’s constitutionally
separate from the presidency, the parliament and the judiciary. It also—the
amendments also shield the military from any kind of public oversight
whatsoever, any kind of civilian oversight.

They also—the amendments also allow the military to act as parliament. In
the absence of a sitting parliament, they’re allowed to issue laws by
decree. They also tighten their grip on the writing of the country’s
constitution. So they have an effective veto over any clause that they
might disapprove of, and they can also actually go further and dissolve the
current assembly, that was formed by parliament just two days before it was
dissolved, and on very vague grounds, if it encounters what’s called an
obstacle, they’re allowed to dissolve that body and handpick their own
hundred-member body that will draft this country’s permanent constitution.
And the military has made clear throughout the transitional period—we only
need to look back to last fall to something called the Selmi Document to
know exactly what they’re looking for, what kind of protections they’re
looking for in the constitution, and that’s really to enshrine their
political and economic privileges in the constitution. So, and also, to add
insult to injury, they recently—the head of the advisory council to the
military council, a man named Sameh Ashour, said that the incoming
president may only serve for an interim period, until a new constitution is
written.

Further above that, the Tantawi—the military council announced a national
defense council that will be formed, of 17 members, which will be headed by
the incoming president. But of those 17 members, 11 of them are senior
military commanders, and decisions will be made by a simple majority vote.
So, really, all of these sweeping steps have really stripped the incoming
president of any significant authority, in a last-minute power grab, and
really is perhaps a fitting end to this nonsensical transition that we’ve
seen over the last 16 months. Right now the country has no constitution, no
parliament, and a president without—an incoming president that will have
scant power. So, really, the military council is controlling the key
branches of state.

*NERMEEN SHAIKH:* Sharif, the powers you describe are, as you said, quite
sweeping. Is there any way in which the incoming president can either—in
any sense, either alter or overturn some of these amendments, these
constitutional amendments?

*SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS:* Well, the Muslim Brotherhood, who is widely
expected to win the presidency tomorrow, has soundly rejected these
amendments. They have also rejected the Supreme Court’s ruling to dissolve
parliament. The army deployed troops around the parliament building to
prevent MPs from entering the building over the weekend. We saw a massive
protest yesterday that was called primarily by the Muslim Brotherhood but
also other forces, also political forces, but including revolutionary
forces like the April 6 Youth Movement. The Revolutionary Socialists were
there, as well. But really, the square was packed by members of the Muslim
Brotherhood who rejected these amendments. And I think it was also a show
of force to act as a warning, in case Ahmed Shafik is named as president,
that they might return to street protests.

>From a legal perspective, whether these amendments can be overturned, it’s
anybody’s guess. I mean, the Supreme Council has been changing the rules as
it goes along and has issued laws by decree. There’s no—there’s no rules to
the game right now. So, I’m sure negotiations are probably underway, but
right now the military council is acting with a lot of hubris and
really—and also in what appears to be desperation, which may be encouraging
in a way, that they fear that their power may be slipping. But right now,
they hold all the cards in terms of the levers of power of the state.

*AMY GOODMAN:* Sharif, what role does the United States play in all of this?

*SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS:* Well, the State Department and the Pentagon voiced
concern over these amendments. We heard State Department spokesperson
Victoria Nuland expressing concern, as did the Pentagon. But as with so
much in U.S. policy, especially towards Egypt, words rarely match the
actions. And so, U.S. policy towards Egypt has changed very little since
before the revolution.

Washington, of course, backed the Mubarak regime with annual military aid
of $1.3 billion for decades. We’ve seen that aid continue. Congress last
year, in the wake of the revolution, added a provision to the aid that had
this—the State Department had to certify that the military, the ruling
military council, was doing a transition to civilian democracy. The Obama
administration issued a national security waiver that overrode that
provision to continue the aid to Egypt, despite widespread human rights
abuses by the army and security forces. It came in the wake of the
NGOcrisis, where U.S.-funded NGOs were raided and closed down, and the
son of
the transportation minister, Sam LaHood, was not allowed to travel or leave
the country.

So, we’ve seen this continuation of U.S. policy where issues regarding
regional concerns with Israel and so forth have trumped human rights
concerns. But many people here on the ground are asking for the U.S. to
finally take a stand and perhaps have its actual policy match its words and
have a significant cutoff of aid, given what’s happened with this—what many
are calling a constitutional coup by the military council.

*AMY GOODMAN:* Also, the number of people who came out to vote in this
election this past weekend, can you talk about the boycott movement? I
mean, the Egyptian elections are looking a little like the U.S. elections
in how few people came out to vote.

*SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS:* Amy, you know, Egyptians have gone to the polls
three times in this transition, and each time they go, their vote has been
rendered meaningless. They went in March 2011, voted on nine amendments to
the constitution, and that was supplanted by a constitutional declaration
issued unilaterally by the military council just a few days later that
altered over 60 articles to the constitution. Then they went to the polls
last fall, and they voted with a much lower turnout, and they voted for
parliament. That parliament has now been dissolved, and so those elections
were rendered worthless. And now they’ve gone to the polls again, and with
again a lower turnout—or we’re actually not sure what the turnout is, to be
clear, in this round, but it’s close to about 50 percent, some have
predicted. And we’ve again seen that their vote has been rendered somewhat
meaningless, because the person that they voted for has been stripped of
all power.

So, there has been a growing movement to boycotts, a growing movement to
spoil ballots, to say that there’s a third choice, we don’t have to pick
between the two candidates that were represented. And I don’t know. I mean,
if Egyptians find that there’s—that their vote means nothing, then perhaps
they’ll seek other avenues of change. But, you know, the runoff election
that we saw—really, the enthusiasm of the streets—I traveled around Cairo
and went to the Delta, as well, to different polling stations, was—the
enthusiasm was very low. You didn’t see the ubiquitous, you know, person
holding up their ink-stained finger and proudly showing that they voted,
because of this—a lot of confusion and apathy that has been fostered by
this very nonsensical transition, as well as the candidates themselves—on
one side, Ahmed Shafik, who’s really a stalwart of the Mubarak regime and
represents the authoritarianism of that state, and on the other, the Muslim
Brotherhood, a conservative Islamist group that, in many ways, has been
seen as abandoning the revolution in pursuit of its own interests. So it
was really a kind of a low-energy turnout.

We’ll have to wait for the numbers tomorrow. But everyone is going to be
glued tomorrow to this announcement by the Presidential Elections
Commission. It’s a very close vote, regardless, by all counts, somewhere
between 52 to 48 or 51 to 49. And the Presidential Election Commission’s
decision are unappealable. So, if they—so everyone will be tuned in
tomorrow to find out who the incoming president is, even though his powers
have been severely curtailed.

*AMY GOODMAN:* Sharif Abdel Kouddous, I want to thank you very much for
being with us. Sharif is joining us from overlooking Tahrir Square in
Cairo, in Egypt, *Democracy Now!* senior correspondent.

This is *Democracy Now!*, democracynow.org, *The War and Peace Report*.
When we come back, Julian Assange has taken refuge in the Ecuadoran embassy
in London. He is seeking political asylum. The British police have issued
an arrest warrant for him. We’ll speak with Assange’s lawyer, Michael
Ratner. Stay with us.


-- 


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the foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



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