*Egypt’s Army Issues Ultimatum to Morsi*

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, KAREEM FAHIM and BEN HUBBARD, Published: July
1, 2013, New York Times,

CAIRO — Egypt’s armed forces threatened on Monday to intervene in the
country’s political crisis, warning President Mohamed Morsi and other
politicians that they had 48 hours to respond to an outpouring of
popular protests that have included demands for his resignation.

In a statement read on state television, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi,
the head of the Egyptian military, said the mass demonstrations that
intensified over the weekend, including the storming of the Muslim
Brotherhood headquarters in Cairo early Monday, reflected an
“unprecedented” expression of popular anger at Mr. Morsi and his
Islamist backers in the brotherhood during his first year in power.

It was unclear from the general’s statement whether the military was
specifically demanding that Mr. Morsi resign. But the statement said
that if Mr. Morsi did not take steps to address demands for a more
inclusive government, the armed forces would move to impose its “own
road map for the future.”

The Health Ministry said on Monday that 16 people had died in the
protests, including eight in the battle outside the Muslim Brotherhood
headquarters, most of them from gunshot wounds. All of those killed
outside the headquarters were young, including one who was 14 and
another who 19, the ministry said. One died of heat-related causes at a
demonstration outside the presidential palace.

After dawn broke Monday, some demonstrators remained in Tahrir Square,
resting under impromptu shelters. While much of the protest elsewhere in
Cairo seemed peaceful, activists reported dozens of sexual assaults on
women in Tahrir Square overnight.

The fiercest confrontation seemed to be at the Brotherhood headquarters
where members of the organization who were trapped inside fired bursts
of birdshot at the attackers and wounded several of them.

After pelting the almost-empty building for hours with stones, Molotov
cocktails and fireworks, the attackers doused its logo with kerosene and
set it on fire, witnesses said, seeming to throw what appeared to be
sandbags used to fortify the windows out onto the street.

It was not immediately clear what became of the Brotherhood members, but
shortly before the building was stormed, armored government vehicles
were seen in the area, possibly as part of an evacuation team.

News reports on Monday spoke of fatalities across the nation numbering
around 16.

The scale of the demonstrations, just one year after crowds in the same
square cheered Mr. Morsi’s inauguration, appeared to exceed even the
mass street protests in the heady final days of the uprising that
overthrew President Hosni Mubarak in 2011. At a moment when Mr. Morsi is
still struggling to control the bureaucracy and just beginning to build
public support for painful economic reforms, the protests have raised
new hurdles to his ability to lead the country as well as new questions
about Egypt’s path to stability.

Clashes between Mr. Morsi’s opponents and supporters broke out in
several cities around the country, killing at least seven people — one
in the southern town of Beni Suef, four in the southern town of Assiut
and two in Cairo — and injuring hundreds. Protesters ransacked
Brotherhood offices around the country.

Demonstrators said they were angry about the lack of public security,
the desperate state of the Egyptian economy and an increase in sectarian
tensions. But the common denominator across the country was the
conviction that Mr. Morsi had failed to transcend his roots in the
Brotherhood, an insular Islamist group officially outlawed under Mr.
Mubarak that is now considered Egypt’s most formidable political force.

The scale of the protests across the country delivered a sharp rebuke to
the group’s claim that its victories in Egypt’s newly open parliamentary
and presidential elections gave it a mandate to speak for most Egyptians.

“Enough is enough,” said Alaa al-Aswany, a prominent Egyptian writer who
was among the many at the protests who had supported the president just
a year ago. “It has been decided for Mr. Morsi. Now, we are waiting for
him to understand.”

(Page 2 of 3)

Shadi Hamid, a researcher at the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar who
studies the Muslim Brotherhood closely, said: “The Brotherhood
underestimated its opposition.” He added: “This is going to be a real
moment of truth for the Brotherhood.”

Mr. Morsi and Brotherhood leaders have often ascribed much of the
opposition in the streets to a conspiracy led by Mubarak-era political
and financial elites determined to bring them down, and they have
resisted concessions in the belief that the opposition’s only real
motive is the Brotherhood’s defeat. But no conspiracy can bring millions
to the streets, and by Sunday night some analysts said the protests
would send a message to other Islamist groups around the region in the
aftermath of the Arab Spring.

“It is a cautionary note: Don’t be too eager for power, and try to think
how you do it,” Mr. Hamid said, faulting the Egyptian Brotherhood for
seeking to take most of the power for itself all at once. “I hear
concern from Islamists around the region about how the Brotherhood is
tainting Islamism.”

Mr. Morsi’s administration appeared caught by surprise. “There are
protests; this is a reality,” Omar Amer, a spokesman for the president,
said at a midnight news conference. “We don’t underestimate the scale of
the protests, and we don’t underestimate the scale of the demands.” He
said the administration was open to discussing any demands consistent
with the Constitution, but he also seemed exasperated, sputtering
questions back at the journalists. “Do you have a better idea? Do you
have an initiative?” he asked. “Suggest a solution and we’re willing to
consider it seriously.”

Many vowed to stay in the streets until Mr. Morsi resigned. Some joked
that it should be comparatively easy: Just two years ago, Egyptian
protesters toppled a more powerful president, even though he controlled
a fearsome police state. But there is no legal mechanism to remove Mr.
Morsi until the election of a new Parliament, expected later this year,
and even some critics acknowledge that forcing the first democratically
elected president from power would set a precedent for future instability.

Some of the protesters called for another intervention by the military,
which seized power from Mr. Mubarak and held onto it for more than a
year. Chants were directed to the defense minister, Gen. Abdul-Fattah
el-Sisi: “Come on Sisi, make a decision!”

General Sisi, for his part, has stayed carefully neutral, feeding the
protesters’ hopes. In a statement last week urging the president and his
opponents to compromise, the general said the military would “intervene
to keep Egypt from sliding into a dark tunnel of conflict, internal
fighting, criminality, accusations of treason, sectarian discord and the
collapse of state institutions.”

Many in the opposition saw the statement as an indication that if the
protests Sunday were disruptive enough, the military would take over
once again. The military sent four helicopters flying low over a
demonstration in Tahrir Square in Cairo on Sunday to reinforce its power
and control, and many below cheered.

The Web site of the flagship state newspaper, Al Ahram, reported Sunday
that soldiers had been ordered only to “protect the will of the people
without bias to any side at the expense of the other, especially as the
political forces have not reached any formula of consensus.”

The extrication of the military from power was the biggest achievement
of Mr. Morsi’s first year in office. Last August, months after his
election, the generals finally went back to their barracks and allowed
him to take full power as president, although the military retains
considerable autonomy under Egypt’s new Constitution.

But Mr. Morsi continued to battle institutions within his own government
left over from Mr. Mubarak, most notably the judiciary, and some of
those fights contributed to the protests that peaked Sunday. The
protests began in November, when he tried to declare himself above the
courts until the passage of a new Constitution, a move that reinforced
the fears of his opponents and perhaps the general public that he
threatened to become a new autocrat.

(Page 3 of 3)

“He was of the revolution,” said Magdi Morsi, an airline flight planner
demonstrating in front of the presidential palace who is not related to
the president. He said he had voted for Brotherhood candidates for
Parliament as well as for Mr. Morsi but had turned against them for
failing to deliver on their promises. “I decided he was a big liar,” he
said. “He must leave. The public is against him now.”

The police, another institution left intact from the Mubarak government,
are in open revolt against Mr. Morsi. In anticipation of the protests
Sunday, the interior minister had already announced that the police
would not protect the offices of the Muslim Brotherhood from attack. And
when the protests began, police officers were almost nowhere to be found.

Several officers in uniform joined the protesters in Tahrir Square
calling for Mr. Morsi’s ouster and asking the military to intervene. Two
officers were seen in the vicinity of the attack on the Brotherhood’s
headquarters talking on hand-held radios, but they did nothing to
intervene.

Two armored vehicles from the interior security forces later arrived but
also did nothing to stop the attack. The officers listened for a while
as the attackers appealed to them to arrest the few Brotherhood members
trying to defend their headquarters with birdshot, and then they left.

The attackers used green pen lasers to search for figures at the windows
of the Brotherhood offices, then hurled Molotov cocktails. They vowed to
show no mercy on the members inside. “Their leaders have left them like
sheeps for the slaughter,” one said. Two people were killed in the
violence at the headquarters, medics there said.

Thousands of Mr. Morsi’s supporters in the Muslim Brotherhood had
gathered at a rally near the presidential palace to prepare to defend it
if the protesters tried to attack. Many brought batons, pipes, bats,
hard hats or motorcycle helmets, even woks or scraps of metal to use as
shields. They stood at attention with clubs raised and marched together.
“We will sacrifice our lives for our religion,” some chanted. “Morsi’s
men are everywhere.”






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Peace Is Doable

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