Ref: Apa komentar MUI cs jika Mesir mengangkat seorang wanita yang bukan 
beragama Islam menjadi wakil presiden?


http://epaper.tempo.co/PUBLICATIONS/KT/KT/2012/06/28/ArticleHtmls/Mursi-Rekrut-Tokoh-Kristen-dan-Perempuan-28062012016005.shtml?Mode=0


Mursi Rekrut Tokoh Kristen dan Perempuan 
KAIRO 

     
Presiden Mesir terpilih, Muhammad Mursi, bakal mengangkat seorang perempuan dan 
seorang Kristen di antara wakilnya, bersamaan dengan pencarian bentuk 
pemerintahan untuk mengatasi polarisasi negeri itu setelah revolusi tahun lalu. 
Menurut juru bicara Mursi, Yas ser Ali, kemarin, lewat telepon, presiden yang 
diumumkan menang pada Ahad lalu itu akan menunjuk lima wakil presiden, termasuk 
seorang (Kristen) Koptik, seorang perempuan, dan seorang anggota aktivis 
gerakan muda. 

Kandidat dari sayap politik AlIkhwan al-Muslimun itu kini menghadapi tantangan 
mengembalikan ekonomi yang tengah berjuang dari pemulihan di tengah ketegangan 
politik dan kecemasan massal dari kolapsnya keamanan sejak Husni Mubarak jatuh 
pada Februari tahun lalu. 

Kemarin, Mursi, 60 tahun, berbicara dengan kelompok-kelompok muda dan para 
pemimpin partai, serta telah menemui anggota minoritas Kristen dan keluarganya 
yang tewas di tengah perlawanan. Dia ber pacu dengan waktu memperluas dukungan 
sebelum menerima penyerahan kekuasaan oleh dewan militer tertinggi (SCAF) pada 
Sabtu nanti. 

Seorang juru bicara kampanye Mur si, Dina Zakariya, sebelumnya mengatakan hanya 
ada satu cara un tuk menciptakan pemerintahan persatuan nasional yang mewakili 
se luruh kekuatan politik dan rakyat Mesir. “Negeri ini sudah terlalu lama 
dalam korupsi. Tak ada partai tunggal yang dapat mengambil penuh tanggung jawab 
untuk mengatasi aneka problema bangsa,” ujarnya di Kairo. 

Beberapa harian Mesir melansir nama potensial kuat. Di antaranya peraih Hadiah 
Nobel dan mantan badan ketua pengawas nuklir Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa Mohamed 
ElBaradei dan mantan deputi perdana menteri dan menteri keuangan Hazem 
el-Beblawi. Ali menyebutkan, Mursi belum memutuskan tim kepresidenan atau 
pemerintahan.
Nama-nama itu spekulasi media. 

Selasa malam lalu, pengadilan Mesir menganulir dekrit pemerintah, sedangkan 
yang memungkinkan militer menangkap sipil.“Pengadilan mengumumkan bahwa Menteri 
Kehakiman telah `memperkosa' otoritas konstitusi lewat penerbitan sebuah 
keputusan yang memberi kewenangan bagu polisi militer dan intelijen militer 
untuk menangkap,“ demikian tulisan dalam dokumen penjelasan dari Hakim Ketua 
Ali Fikry. BLOOMBERG BUSSINESSWEEK | THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR | DWI 
ARJANTO 


++++

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/06/26/world/meast/egypt-politics/?hpt=hp_t2

Egypt's new president to pick woman, Christian VPs
By the CNN Wire Staff
June 27, 2012 -- Updated 0208 GMT (1008 HKT)

Egypt's president-elect, Mohamed Morsi, is in the process of putting together a 
government.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  a.. A Cairo court overturns a rule allowing the military to arrest civilians 
  b.. Mohamed Morsi's adviser says he will pick a woman and a Christian as vice 
presidents 
  c.. Morsi has begun assembling a new government 
  d.. Ahmed Shafik will establish a new political party in Egypt, his office 
says 
Cairo (CNN) -- Egypt's first democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi, 
will appoint a woman as one of his vice presidents and a Christian as another, 
his policy adviser told CNN.

"For the first time in Egyptian history -- not just modern but in all Egyptian 
history -- a woman will take that position," Ahmed Deif told CNN's Christiane 
Amanpour on Monday. "And it's not just a vice president who will represent a 
certain agenda and sect, but a vice president who is powerful and empowered and 
will be taking care of critical advising within the presidential Cabinet."

Amanpour blog: The woman who monitored Egypt's election

The news came as the man Morsi beat for the presidency, Ahmed Shafik, left 
Egypt for Abu Dhabi, and as Cairo's administrative court overturned a rule that 
allowed the military to arrest people without a warrant.

Though Morsi had previously argued for banning women from the presidency, he 
said before the election that as president he would stand for women's rights.

"The role of women in Egyptian society is clear," Morsi told CNN weeks before 
the runoff election. "Women's rights are equal to men. Women have complete 
rights, just like men. There shouldn't be any kind of distinction between 
Egyptians except that ... based on the constitution and the law."

The Islamist figure, a Muslim Brotherhood leader, also promised to safeguard 
the rights of minorities.

Egypt "definitely" will not be an "Islamic Republic," Deif said Monday.

Morsi moved into his offices Monday, said Jihad Haddad, an adviser to the 
transition team.

He began the work of assembling a new government -- one of the powers he 
maintains after the military junta running the country recently slashed the 
presidency's reach.

The process of picking people to serve in the Cabinet "won't end in a day," 
Haddad said.

Shafik, who lost in the runoff election to Morsi, left the country Tuesday for 
the United Arab Emirates, his attorney and a Cairo airport official said.

He traveled to Abu Dhabi, Cairo airport official Mohamed Sultan said.

He is not fleeing the country, Shafik's attorney, Showee Elsayed, told CNN.

While legal petitions accusing Shafik of corruption were submitted in April, 
prosecutors have not taken legal action on them, so "there are absolutely no 
legal cases pending" against him, Elsayed said.

Shafik was the final prime minister to serve under President Hosni Mubarak 
before he was ousted.

Shafik's office said Tuesday he "will establish a new political party upon his 
return from the UAE and Saudi Arabia, where he is on private visits."

He and his two daughters will perform Umrah, an Islamic religious pilgrimage to 
Mecca.

Meanwhile, Cairo's administrative court, which hears civilian complaints 
against the government, rejected a controversial rule Tuesday that the Ministry 
of Justice had established before the election.

The rule stated that military personnel and intelligence forces could arrest 
civilians without a warrant. The right to arrest civilians had previously been 
reserved for police officers, the state-run Ahram news agency reported.

The court also decided that, on September 1, it will look into legal petitions 
filed against the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces over its decision to 
cancel the constitutional committee, which had been charged by the parliament 
before it was dissolved with drafting a new constitution.

The court decided that on July 7, it will look into legal petitions filed to 
stop recently issued constitutional articles by SCAF that limit the powers of 
the president.

And on July 10, the court will look into legal petitions filed against the 
decision to dissolve parliament.

They were among 14 legal complaints filed about the rule by various individuals 
and groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood.

CNN's Samuel Burke, Amir Ahmed and Josh Levs contributed to this report.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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