This week Egypt’s President Mohammed
Morsi stupefied Egyptian public and
Islamists around the world with his new
decree which grants him sweeping
powers that practically make him immune to judicial decisions and gives him
near absolute power in constitutional matters.
Pharaoh Mursi?? |
At the time of writing Egypt is roiling with mass pro democracy
protests that are spreading with the passing of each day. On
27 November 2012, almost 100,000 protesters flocked to Egypt’s iconic
Tahrir Square to protest against Morsi’s new decree, which they call as a power
grab and led the Nobel Laureate Opposition leader, Al Baradei to pronounce
Morsi as Egypt’s
New Pharaoh.
The decree gives President Morsi the power to proclaim any new
law without any hindrance and no challenge could be made to his decisions, not
even in the Supreme Court. He
also actively banned the judiciary from dissolving the Shura Council (i.e.
the Upper House of the Parliament). This has been viewed as a defensive strategy
by Morsi to protect the Shura Council from any judicial decisions, seeing that
the Supreme
Court already dissolved the lower house of Parliament on the premise, that
the elections were held on rules that were in contrast to the country’s
constitution. That decision pitched Morsi against the Judiciary that has remain
unchanged since Mubarak’s reign ended in 2011.
Morsi’s new decree also immunizes
his decisions on “National Sovereignty” from any judicial review until a
new assembly is elected early next year. Now what those issues of national sovereignty
are, no one from the Morsi camp has been able to satisfactorily explain it to
the world at large. Most probably, the issues of national sovereignty pertain
to his decisions on foreign and domestic affairs like imposition of martial
law, severing diplomatic ties with nations and dismissing the cabinet.
Egypt unsurprisingly has risen up in protest |
He also gives himself the power to tackle any challenges by
issuing uncontested decisions to protect any state institutions from performing
their functions. This has been interpreted to mean that the President has given
himself extensive
standby emergency powers, should such a situation arise.
Needless to say, this new decree has raised more than just eyebrows.
Egypt is up in protest, and this protest seems to have united the hitherto divided
and diffused opposition. Although it is
the common Egyptian on the street protesting against the decree because he sees
it as a return to Mubarak era and the judiciary, who see it as a blow to their
authority, it is very interesting to note that the protest camp has
also seen former military men join the Anti-Morsi demonstrations.
In an interesting article
in the Washington Post , it has been reported that the mass protests are
also being used by Anti-Muslim Brotherhood elements, notably the liberals,
secularists and Mubarak era military officers, to topple Mursi’s Islamist
regime. It is important to bear in mind that Mursi faces opposition from the
Coptic Church and secularists who claim that the Brotherhood dominated panel
does not reflect the pluralistic
identity of Egypt .
Despite the allegations by the liberals and the church leaders
that Morsi is trying to pave the way for Salafists to come into power, it is
worth noting that Morsi has proved to be so far not the demon that the western
analysts predicted. In fact, his relations with USA have improved since he
brokered a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza much to the consternation of
Islamist and Jewish right-wingers. It
remains to be seen how big a role USA plays in this ongoing drama seeing that
ice between the Morsi led government and USA has just started to melt. The
White House, given its apparent cold-shouldering of the Islamist regime, has
stopped short of denouncing the decree and called for a peaceful
solution of the issue.
From the view point of Morsi, we must remember that from day
one, he has been on a quest against ousting Mubarak era officials from any
positions of power. So far he has been generally successful since he has
effectively sidelined the military officials from interfering in important
political decisions and also removed
the Mubarak era prosecutor general Abdel Maguid Mehmoud, who had infuriated
Egyptian revolutionaries , by playing an important role in the acquittal of Mubarak
era official who allegedly were involved in violent crackdowns against
Anti-Mubarak protesters.
This whole play, it seems, is heading towards the-soon-to-be-introduced
constitution, which many fear, would impose stricter Islamist oriented laws in
the country, which the Mubarak era elements, liberals, pro-USA parties, church
leaders and secularists are opposing in principle. How will the new constitution
shape Egypt and its role in the middle east, we will have to wait and see, as
the success of the Arab spring depends
on how Morsi lets democracy flourish in post Mubarak Egypt.
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