[CNN]
 
After power grab, critics wonder if Morsy is Egypt's next strongman - CNN.com

By Michael Pearson and Greg Botelho, CNN

November 27, 2012 -- Updated 1717 GMT (0117 HKT)
        
(CNN) -- Egyptians swarmed Cairo's Tahrir Square Tuesday, seeking to revive a 
democratic groundswell that swept the country's former strongman from power 
nearly two years ago and demand that the man they chose to replace him respect 
their wishes.

At least one protester died in early clashes with authorities ahead of the 
massive demonstrations planned for later Tuesday, the Ministry of Health said. 
The opposition Popular Alliance Party said the protester suffocated after 
inhaling excessive amounts of tear gas.

Protesters are angry with President Mohamed Morsy for his declaration last week 
that his edicts are beyond the reach of judges in what critics call an 
unprecedented power grab. A statement Monday night that seemed to at least 
partially limit the scope of the decree did not seem to salve their anger.

Protesters want to show that "the whole population of Egypt is against" Morsy 
and his supporters, said former Finance Minister Samir Radwan.

Morsy and his supporters in the powerful Muslim Brotherhood movement have 
defended the policy as necessary to defend the fragile Arab Spring revolution 
that pushed former President Hosni Mubarak from power and led to the country's 
first free elections.

The Muslim Brotherhood scrapped its own demonstration to show support for Morsy 
-- also scheduled for Tuesday -- "to avoid any problems due to tension in the 
political arena," said spokesman Mahmoud Ghozlan.
Robin Wright: Morsy went too far
Morsy adviser defends edicts
Walking through the Cairo protests
Anger over Morsy power grab

Morsy's Freedom and Justice Party is the political arm of the Muslim 
Brotherhood, the once-banned Islamist movement.

Tuesday's opposition protests are expected to go ahead despite the 
clarification of the president's edict.

Morsy "did not give himself judicial power" but did provide "immunity for his 
presidential decisions," said Jihad Haddad, a senior adviser in the Freedom and 
Justice Party.

He added that "the president himself (is) not immune from judicial oversight," 
though it wasn't clear in what instances that would come into practice, or if 
there was anything preventing Morsy from issuing a new decree so this could not 
happen.

Morsy already has the powers of president and legislature after courts upheld 
the former ruling military council's decision to dissolve parliament. But it 
was his edict last week -- declaring, among other things, that judges can't 
overturn his decisions or interfere with a Muslim Brotherhood-dominated council 
writing a new constitution -- that caused anger to boil over.

Morsy insists he's trying to protect Egypt's fragile Arab Spring revolution, 
not accumulate unchecked power. His moves "cemented the process that would 
create the institutions that would limit his power, define the constitution and 
have parliamentary elections so that we can say this is a democracy," said 
Haddad.

But that's not how his political foes -- seen as "heretics" by many members of 
the Muslim Brotherhood, according to Washington Institute for Near East Policy 
fellow Eric Trager -- look at the situation.

Former U.S. diplomat Jamie Rubin said Morsy's edict "brings to mind all the 
fears that people in that part of the world have had about the Muslim 
Brotherhood when it comes to democracy."

Amr Hamzawy, who'd been in the now-dissolved parliament, said action is needed 
to prevent more "suffering" under a president with "sweeping powers," as Egypt 
had for 60 years under men like Mubarak, Anwar Sadat and Gamal Nasser.

"Morsy is the ... president who has sweeping executive (power), sweeping 
legislative (power) and ... puts himself above the judicial branch of 
government," said Hamzawy, founder of Egypt's Freedom Party. "That is a very 
dangerous mix, which can only lead to a dictatorship."

Egypt's Morsy praised, now protested

Clashes and anguish near Tahrir Square
U.S. raises concerns about Egypt

Intent on not letting that happen, people around the country have staged 
protests and stormed Muslim Brotherhood offices over the past six days -- 
sometimes with violent results, with hundreds being reported injured and one 
killed in confrontations with security forces and Morsy's backers.

Senior presidential aide Essam El-Erian calls concerns about Morsy's edict 
overblown, blaming the protests on "counterrevolutionary forces" loyal to 
Mubarak's party. Haddad says polls show "an overwhelming majority supporting 
President Morsy and his decisions."

Judges have also reacted. Only seven of Egypt's 34 courts are still operating 
and 90% of its prosecutors have gone on strike, said Judge Mohamed al-Zind of 
the Egyptian Judge's Club. He described Morsy's edict as "the most vicious ... 
attack on the judicial authority's independence."

On Monday, Morsy met with members of Egypt's highest judicial body, the Supreme 
Judicial Council, which has been critical of his edict.

Beyond the judiciary, there are concerns about how fresh popular unrest will 
affect an already-fragile economy, where about 25% live in poverty, and stock 
market values plunged after Morsy's announcement.

"The majority of the people are really suffering, and they were looking forward 
to some stability," said Radwan, who served under Mubarak as well as in the 
government that followed him. "I'm afraid that this constitutional declaration 
has blown it up."

The next few days and weeks could produce more stalemate, more violence or more 
uncertainty. But experts say, even if things remain peaceful, how the country's 
new constitution takes shape may prove critical to its future.

There has also been growing turmoil about the constitutional panel, pitting 
conservatives who want Egypt to be governed by Islam's Sharia law against 
moderates and liberals who are making it a higher priority to ensure basic 
freedoms, including for women.

With the Muslim Brotherhood's increasing hold on power, more non-Islamists may 
walk away from that process, leaving the path open to a constitution embracing 
the Brotherhood's view of an Islamic state in Egypt, according to Trager.

"By the time you get that new constitution, it will have been written by an 
Islamist-dominated assembly that all non-Islamists have completely abandoned, 
and the new parliamentary elections will likely exclude members of the former 
ruling party who posed the greatest threat to (Morsy's) authority," he said.

CNN's Reza Sayah and journalists Ian Lee and Mohamed Fadel Fahmy reported from 
Cairo, Egypt. CNN's Michael Pearson, Greg Botelho and Jason Hanna contributed 
to this report in Atlanta.


© 2012 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.




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