Egypt's draft constitution enshrines army role in politics

CAIRO  Sat Nov 30, 2013 10:49am EST


http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/11/30/us-egypt-constitution-idUSBRE9AT07A20131130

Amr Moussa, chairman of the committee to amend the country's constitution
speaks at a news conference at the Shura Council in Cairo September 22,
2013.

Credit: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

(Reuters) - Egypt's new constitution, according to a draft text completed
on Saturday nearly five months after the army deposed an Islamist
president, will bolster the military's hand and ban religious parties.

The constitution, expected to be put to a referendum in December, is part
of an army-planned political transition meant to lead to parliamentary and
presidential elections next year.

"In the early hours of the morning the assembly (reached) an overall
consensus over the constitution articles," its chairman, former Arab League
chief Amr Moussa, told a news conference.

The 50-member constituent assembly later began voting to approve the draft,
article by article, and once this process is complete it will submit the
document to interim President Adli Mansour, who will set a date for the
referendum.

The final draft, seen by Reuters, does away with the Islamist-inspired
additions that featured in the constitution approved by a referendum during
Mursi's year in office.

It empowers the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to approve the choice
for a defense minister who would serve for eight years from when the
constitution becomes law.

Army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ousted the Muslim Brotherhood's
Mursi, Egypt's first freely elected leader, on July 3 after mass protests
against him. Sisi suspended the constitution and an assembly was named to
draft a new one by December 3.

The document it has produced proscribes any political party founded on "a
religious basis", reverting to a prohibition that was in force during
Mubarak's 30-year rule.

Even though Islamists dominated five national votes held since Mubarak fell
in 2011, the constituent assembly includes only two Islamists - one from
the hardline Salafi Nour party and the other a former Brotherhood leader
who is now harshly critical of the group he left last year.

The draft constitution also allows civilians to be tried in military courts
- another holdover from the Mubarak era and one that will dismay
pro-democracy campaigners.

Assuming the draft constitution is approved, next year's parliamentary
election will be run under a different voting system, with two-thirds of
the seats allotted to individual candidates and one third to party lists -
reversing the proportions in the last polls, which Islamist parties won.

The authorities have pursued a campaign to repress the Brotherhood,
accusing it of violence and terrorism. Hundreds were killed when security
forces stormed two pro-Mursi protest camps in August and thousands have
been arrested since then.

The Brotherhood, which formally renounced violence decades ago, accuses the
army of staging a military coup.

(Reporting by Asma
Alsharif<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=asmaalsharif&;>and
Omar Fahmy; Editing by Alistair
Lyon<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=alistair.lyon&;>;
Editing by Alistair Lyon)



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