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Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Egypt protests Moursi means occupy Department PM

Cairo (Reuters)-Egypt, presidential Institution Friday (3/5), denied a rumor circulating that President Mohamed Moursi meant to occupy the post of Prime Minister in the next cabinet reshuffle, Egypt's official news agency reports, MENA.

"There was a discussion about charging the position to other people," said Presidential Spokesman Omar Amer Egypt as cited MENA.

"Qualifying will be a basic criterion for the upcoming cabinet reshuffle," said Amer.

The current Prime Minister Hesham Qandil have faced widespread condemnation from the opposition with respect to the "poor performance" of his Government and sacking him have become the major demands of the opposition, reports Xinhua.

At the end of April, Moursi Announces cabinet reshuffle will happen and say they are highly qualified will be the responsibility and has no achievements to be replaced.

According to political commentators, most members of the reshuffle that is expected to include six Ministers apparently will not satisfy the country's opposition, who are demanding changes to the Government and the dismissal of a total of Qandil.

Translator: Chaidar Abdullah



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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Egypt students protest over mass poisoning case

Cairo (News and Us)-hundreds of students from the Islamic University in Egypt on Monday protested and demanded an investigation and punishment for those who should be responsible for the food poisoning case happened en masse on their campuses this month.

About 90 students from Al-Azhar University in Cairo was hospitalized on Monday after they ate in the cafeteria on campus, according to Egypt's Ministry of health had previously said about 450 college students were treated for food poisoning on campus.


The students said the incident Monday, a sign that college officials of Al-Azhar does not pay attention to the College and the thousand-year-old mosque that has attracted students from the Sunnis around the world.


Initial investigation conducted by units of the poison from the Hospital of Ain Shams in Cairo said that the food eaten victims that had been polluted.


"You guys are tight-lipped over this issue, why clamming?" exclaimed student on Monday.


Facing the street in front of their campus in Cairo's Nasr City borders.


Ibrahim El-Hodhod, Vice-President of education and students at Al-Azhar said, the Committee of inquiry has been constituted to prosecute this incident report, Egypt, MENA news agency.


El Hodhod looking student who was hospitalized on Monday, MENA.


An emergency meeting of the management of the University was held Tuesday to deal with the problem.


The Prime Minister of Egypt, Hisham Candlestick also looking students in the hospital Monday and asked the Interior Minister to urgently investigate the mass poisoning, according to a statement broadcast from his Office on Monday night, according to Reuters.


(M007)




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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Clash occurred outside the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt

Cairo (Reuters)-Clashes occur between demonstrasn and the security forces outside the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Mouqatam, around the central part of the capital city of Egypt, Cairo, according to the official daily reports Al-Ahram in an online edition.

Dozens of protesters threw stones toward the security forces guarding the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood. Apparatus countered with tear gas

The report, as quoted Xinhua News Agency, also called the security forces have extended their personnel in that area in order to prevent the protesters barged into the building.

On Saturday, the TV footage showed a blood-soaked opposition activists and several journalists and cameramen were attacked. The Act was allegedly carried out by members of the Muslim Brotherhood, the stronghold of Egypt Mohammed Moursi's new President.

Egypt on Sunday Journalist Association organized a sit-in in protest and submitted a report to the State Attorney's Office.

(C003)



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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Egypt does not admit the marriage contract

Cairo (Reuters)-Egypt Foreign Ministry warned its citizens abroad that the country does not recognize marriage contract.

"The citizens of Egypt abroad should understand that the marriage contract is not valid according to the law," said Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Consulate Ragaai Nasr, was quoted as saying Egypt's MENA News Agency, Thursday.

Warning the Government of Egypt was linked to the increasing number of married women contract between Egypt and Lebanon man.

Embassy of Egypt in Beirut reported that lately many Muslim women do Egypt marries contract with Christian man in Lebanon.

Mentioned, Egypt Embassy in Beirut has refused to legalize marriage license contract filed a number of citizens of Egypt and his partner in that country.

Egypt Embassy did not mention the number of couples who filed marriage license contract between the citizens of Egypt and Lebanon, but insisted that the denial of an endorsement contract marriage certificate was taken because it is not in accordance with the legislation in force in the country of Queen Cleopatra. (/M043 M014)



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Monday, March 18, 2013

The Government of Egypt remained until election

President Of Egypt Muhammad Mursi (REUTERS/Egyptian Presidency)

There is no change of the Cabinet to the legislative elections, "
Cairo (Reuters)-Egypt's Cabinet Spokesman Alaa Al-Hadidi dismissed the opposition's insistence for the dissolution of the Government led by Prime Minister Hisham Qandil.

"There is no change of the Cabinet to the legislative elections," said Al Hadidi was quoted as saying Egypt's MENA News Agency, on Wednesday.

He said the PM and Cabinet Member ranks Qandil Middle running his State duties as normal regardless of the rumors of that sort.

"All the rumours concerning the resignation of the Government were totally untrue and unfounded," he said asserted.

According to him, President Mohamed Moursi always give appreciation of the work of the Government in the midst of difficulties facing the nation.

However, Al Hadidi admitted that the opposition has submitted a proposal to the President to dissolve the Government Moursi and replaced with a Cabinet of national unity Government to be called. "

However, he said, the President rejected a proposal to Government dissolution Moursi.

In the meantime, the legislative elections set to be held on April 22, 2013 suspended until the time which is yet to be determined.

The suspension of the Election Commission had done it was decided following the decision of The State Court's ruling regarding the election schedule of the President.

The courts assess the presidential decree that does not comply with the Constitution because it is based on the new law which has not been confirmed by the Supreme Court.

The opposition boycotted the election schedule it warmly welcomed the decision of the Court.

The President also expressed respect Moursi court decisions The countries.
(/M043 Z002)



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Sunday, March 17, 2013

"Skipper steel" Egypt was sentenced to 37 years in prison

Cairo (Reuters)-A Criminal Court of Egypt dropped 37-year prison sentence to Ahmed Ezz, who is known as "the skipper of steel" in the era of former President Hosni Mubarak and prominent member of the party which was then in power.

Ezz was condemned for corruption charges, benefit themselves and looting of State funds. The investigation revealed the country funds in vain Ezz deal to buy a State-owned steel company, Ad-Dekheila.

Through the deal, private profit as much as Ezz 710 million US dollars from 2001 to 2011 with the help of senior government officials.

Ezz proved to unite State-owned companies, Ad-Dekheila, with his own steel company under a single trademark "Ezz Dekheila Ad-", Xinhua reports.

Ezz, aides close to Mubarak's son--Gamal Mubarak, was arrested at the end of February 2011, once the process of overthrowing the Government of Mubarak.

(C003)



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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Officers, the soldier injured in clashes in Port Said Egypt

Cairo (Reuters)-An army officer and two soldiers were injured in clashes between protesters and security forces in Port Said in northern Egypt on Sunday (3/3), said Helmy el-Hefny, Deputy Health Minister in Port Said, told Xinhua.

Although the Government-owned Ahram online daily quoting military sources reported one description of a soldier killed, Abdel Rahman Farag--on duty at the hospital Port Said--confirmed three people injured and one soldier was in critical condition.

According to a statement issued by Egypt's armed forces at the official his Facebook, clashes between protestors and security forces has killed a soldier--who was shot in the neck by an unidentified person.

The statement denied reports earlier that a soldier was killed during a gun battle between the raw-the armed forces and police personnel. He urged residents in Port Said in order not to approach the headquarters of the Governor or the institution guarded by Armed Forces personnel for the sake of the safety of their lives.

More than 310 people injured on Sunday in clashes between security forces and protesters on the handover of the prisoners on the coast of Port Said, Egypt Gubernuran, Xinhua reported. Meanwhile, the unrest has entered the weekend third in the region, said the Ministry of health.

Protesters clash with police, while the Interior Ministry decided to relocate the prisoners waiting for the ruling of 29 regarding the tragic riots at soccer matches so that killed more than 70 people in February last year, in order to avoid a riot, said Egypt's official news agency, MENA.

As many as 200 people from families of prisoners gathered outside the police station in Port Said, after they learned that their families will be moved to the prison of the unknown.

Protestors threw petrol bombs and fireballs into the building the police station and set fire to a police car, while security officers retaliated with tear gas to disperse the mob.

Elsewhere in Egypt, dozens of protesters blocking the path of el-Bahr on the traffic circle in the city of Mahalla Shoon, Gharbiya, with roadblocks and burned tires. Protestors also threw stones in the direction of a passing car.

In another incident the demonstrators in At-Tharir Roundabout in Central Cairo to put the tires burned at the entrance to the circle, so that traffic flow is completely at a standstill. Meanwhile the Interior Ministry ordered all police personnel to traffic leaving the roundabout to avoid further clashes, said MENA.

On Sunday morning, the protest was carried out by a group of football fans who were in Cairo on the streets Of Salem--leading to the international airport, thus blocking the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry take the train just in time.

Protestors shut down the road really was, after some protesters burned car tires, making passengers leave the car and hurried walk so as not to lag behind their aircraft. (C003)



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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Egypt dig the grave of Pharaoh's Minister at the Luxor

Cairo (Reuters)-Minister of Egypt Mohamed Ibrahim Antiques Ali finds new findings one grave a Minister of Pharaoh (Pharaoh) of the reign of King Ramses II, who ruled Egypt from 1304 B.C. to 1237 B.C., according to the report, Egypt's official news agency MENA on Wednesday (20/2).

The Tomb belonged to an ancient Minister Upstream and downstream Egypt in Khai Gubernuran Luxor, Ali said in one taklimat.

The newly excavated tombs were found in the same axis with the Ramesseum Temple, built during the reign of King Ramses II, Ali said as reported by Xinhua. Additionaly, some other part of the graves will be dug up after one team from one University in Belgium complete the excavation activities.

Mansour Boraik, Director of Field Excavation in Luxor, said Khai, remains Minister for 15 years and its main task is to supervise the workers who are assigned to make the King's Tomb in the Valley of the Kings and Queens.

(C003)

Editor: Tasrief Tarmizi

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Egypt women protest sexual violence

Illustration. (REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah)

... it is important for the President to Morsi take measures to end the culture of impunity is drastic and gender-based discrimination.
Cairo (Reuters)-protesters on Tuesday, Egypt again took to the streets to demand an end to sexual violence, along with a growing campaign against repeated attacks in downtown Cairo.

"The voice of women is a revolution," said the protesters--both men and women — who shouted while brandishing a large flag icons women Egypt.

At Tuesday's protest is the latest in a series of actions to an end to the culture of impunity that demands, following the horrific attack reports in and around Tahrir square.

The attack was a "weapon in the ongoing political war," said Mayar Abdel Aziz, who blamed "opponents of freedom" were behind them.

Sexual harassment has long been a problem in Egypt but recently the nature of the violence and frequency of attacks has increased so that the trigger guard.

"We're conditioned to be passive and not asking for our rights," before the revolution, said Abdel Aziz.

The protesters were also angry over the remarks of Assembly members over who blame women because of attacks on fishing themselves.

"Women sometimes provoke the rape upon herself by putting themselves in a position that makes them as the subject of rape," said Adel Afifi Salafi Deputies quoted by the local media.

Last week, the human rights watchdog Amnesty International issued a statement urging President Mohamed Morsi to take action in order to end the attacks.

"It's horrible, violent attacks against women including rape around Tahrir square shows that it is important for the President to Morsi take measures to end the culture of impunity is drastic and gender-based discrimination, and that all political leaders are talking," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Director of Amnesty for the Middle East and North Africa.

AFP reported, at rallies in Cairo, women talked about the attacks that are "systematically".

"We are always experiencing harassment (in Egypt). But the new thing is that violence has become systematic, "said Asmaa Ali that led the group to combat that problem.

"Harassment is a polite Word. We need to call it sexual assault. even a rape has occurred in the field group Tahrir, "he said.

(G003/M016)



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Monday, February 25, 2013

The first Mufti of Egypt appointed through election of scholars

Cairo (Reuters)-the great Al Azhar Grand Sheikh Prof Dr Ahmed Al Tayeb on Monday presided over the election of a national who was a Mufti was first in the history of modern Egypt Rapture a passing vote of cleric mufti.

Prof Dr Mohammed Shawki Ibrahim Abdul Karim won the most votes as National Mufti replaces Prof. Dr. Sheikh Ali Goumah whose term of duty expires this month, says Prof. Tayeb.

Sheikh Ali Gouma had previously appointed by President Hosni Mubarak and then extended by one year by the High Military Council that came to power while when Mubarak resigned on February 11, 2011.

Election results will be presented to the cleric President Mohamed Moursi in order to set out in presidential decree as National Mufti for four years of service.

During this time, the Mufti appointed by Presidents usually without asking for consideration of the scholars.

"The appointment of Muftis by the selection of scholars is the positive impact of the revolution, January 25, 2011," said social observer, Mohamed Sabri.

Scholars who have voting rights in the determination of Mufri is a member of The Al Azhar Ulama or "Haiah Kibarul Al Azhar Cleric".

Before the election, the charismatic cleric was set a condition that the candidate was a Mufti Professor in the field of Islamic law, eloquently berbasa United Kingdom and knowledgeable as well as under the age of 60 years.

The position of Mufti of the National lead Institution and issuing fatwas or Darul Fatwa equal of Prime Minister give opinions or advice to the Government on religious issues, particularly Islam.

In addition to setting the major holidays of Islam such as Eid ul-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, the Mufti was also authorized to reject or approve any death sentence laid down the Court.

Sheikh Al-Shawki is currently Chairman of the Department of Comparative School at Al Azhar University branch of Tanta, 90 km north of Cairo. (/M043 M014)



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Sunday, February 17, 2013

The opposition again head to the Presidential Palace Egypt

Cairo (Reuters)-Opposition on Friday returned to the Presidential Palace came to Egypt, the official residence and workplace of the President of Moursi.

Hundreds of demonstrators seemed to run regularly while shouting shouted and shouted antipemerintah carrying posters and banners inscribed with sentences against President Mohamed Moursi.

They came from several mosques around Eastern Palace in Cairo, including the An Nur Mosque in the District of Abbasea.

Posters and banners, among others, reads "Disband the Government" and "tear down the Constitution made by the Muslim Brotherhood", referring to the formation of the new Constitution which was passed by a referendum at the end of last year.

A similar demo action took place on Friday last week that turned into bloody clashes between protesters and security apparatus so that one person and 79 people injured.

In addition to the Ettihadiyah Palace, thousands of protesters also come up to the roundabout Tahrir in downtown Cairo after Friday prayers.

As in Cairo, a number of provincial capitals, including Alexandria, Port Said, Suez Canal, and Ismailism not escape from opponents of government action demo.

Responding to the rise of the demo action, the President in some occasions Moursi said that the rallies were as common in Egypt at the time of the transition to a life of democracy.

The President also called for the earlier Moursi dialogue with all political forces, but the opposition responded by cold.

Political analyst Gaber El Sassar assess national dialog mandeknya that because each party establish conflicting terms to each other.

"Before, the opposition figures include Mohamed Elbaredai, Amr Moussa, expressed the readiness of Sibahi Hamdun, to attend a national dialogue, but they set impossible conditions accepted by Moursi's President," he said.

Terms of the proposed opposition, for example, the President must dissolve the Government led by Moursi Prime Minister Hisham Qandil and the formation of the Cabinet, the idea that Nations rescue rejected Moursi, he said.

On Thursday (31/2) last week, the Sheikh Of Al Azhar collects a number of opposition figures, including Elbaredai, Moussa, and Government representatives Sibahi includes the freedom and Justice Party, the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood.

In the meeting it was agreed a national dialogue, but so far the efforts the Union stance that has not been fulfilled.
(M043/D007)



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Saturday, February 16, 2013

126 injuries in Egypt in clashes pendemo-security forces

Cairo (Reuters)-at least 128 people injured, Friday (8/2), in a clash between members of the security forces and anti-Government protestors in various places in Egypt, when protestors took to the main streets and public squares across the country.

"As much as 126 people injured across the country. As many as 67 injured in Gubernuran Gharbiya, 80 kilometers north of Cairo, while seven people injured in Alexandria, Kafr Esh seven in Gubernuran-Sheikh, four in Sharqiya and Gubernuran four people again outside the Presidential Palace in Cairo, "said Health Ministry spokesman Ahmed Omar told Xinhua.

Omar added all the victims suffered various injuries between scratched, burning, choking smoke and broken bones. He also said some security personnel were reported injured President of metal used to "shoot" a bird, but it has not been confirmed.

In the town of El-Mahalla in Gharbiya, fierce Gubernuran clashes occurred between security personnel and protesters who tried to break through the gates of the City Council, said Xinhua--which monitored BETWEEN in Jakarta on Saturday morning.

Security personnel will disperse them by using tear gas, but small clashes still occur, thus paralysing traffic and forcing shops in the area closed.

Meanwhile, scores of protestors tried to attack the headquarters of the justice and Freedom Party (FJP), belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood, and also the Gubernuran police station in Gharbiya, around 80 kilometres north of Cairo, but the security forces managed to disperse them.

In Cairo, protestors attempted to move the barbed wire around the Presidential Palace in the capital city of Egypt, and climb the gate, while others threw rocks toward the Palace.

Presidential guards withdrew and assembled inside the palace complex in order to avoid clashes with protesters, while the protesters--most still under--trying to throw rocks and firecrackers into the Palace. But the other protestors to prevent them in order to avoid a clash with the security forces, said Xinhua cameraman from the scene.

The situation escalated when some protestors set fire to one of the gates of the Palace which resulted in the burning of trees nearby, inside the Palace, said Egypt's official news agency, MENA.

Near the roundabout At-Tahrir in Cairo, a number of protestors trying to break down the wall that separates the protestors and the Ministry of the Interior, but that situation can end up having some small controlled clashes between protesters and security officers.

In Alexandria, fierce clashes erupted between members of the security forces and protesters who tried to break into a police station in the area of Sedi Gaber Abou Qir have revealed extensive, while the police attempted to disperse them with tear gas.

Fierce clashes also erupted in similar Gubernuran of Kfar Esh-Sheikh, 125 kilometers north of Cairo, when the protestors tried to break through into the headquarters of the Governor. That event makes the security forces used tear gas against protestors who threw stones towards them, said several eyewitnesses told Xinhua.

Police arrested three protesters accused of inciting riots and betrokan.

(C003)



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Monday, January 23, 2012

First session for Egypt assembly

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23 January 2012 Last updated at 11:35 GMT The BBC's Jon Leyne says it is "a truly historic moment" for Egypt

The first Egyptian parliament elected since President Hosni Mubarak resigned last February after a popular uprising is holding its inaugural session.

Islamists dominated the elections held for the People's Assembly over the past three months, winning 73% of the seats.

The Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party won 235 seats, the ultra-conservative Salafist Nour Party 121 and the moderate al-Wasat Party 10.

The chamber's first task is to elect a speaker and two deputies.

Monday's session was chaired by Mahmoud al-Saqqa of the liberal New Wafd party, who at 81 is the oldest member of the People's Assembly.

He began proceedings by ordering a moment of silence for the 850 people who were killed during the 18-day uprising against Mr Mubarak.

The former leader is currently on trial, accused of ordering security forces to shoot protesters. He could face the death penalty if convicted.

Oaths

The assembly's inaugural session then turned briefly chaotic when several MPs made impromptu additions to the text of the oath they were taking, provoking angry calls to order from Mr Saqqa.

Continue reading the main story

Freedom and Justice Party - 235 seats (47.2%)

Nour Party - 121 seats (24.3%)

New Wafd Party - 38 seats (7.6%)

Egyptian Bloc - 35 seats (7.0%)

Al-Wasat Party - 10 seats (2.0%)

Reform and Development Party - 10 seats (2.0%)

Revolution Continues - 7 seats (1.4%)

Other parties and independents - 42 seats (8.4%); 10 seats also appointed by president/ruling military council

The oath ends with a pledge to respect the constitution and law, but one Islamist added "God's law", while two pro-reform MPs promised to "complete the 25 January revolution" and to respect "the rights of its martyrs".

Several independent MPs and others from liberal and secular groups also wore yellow sashes saying: "No to military trials for civilians."

At least 12,000 people have faced military tribunals since the Supreme Council for the Armed Forces assumed the president's powers.

Held over three phases between 28 November and 11 January, the parliamentary elections were considered the freest in Egyptian history.

The People's Assembly's priority is to select a 100-member panel to draft a new constitution that will be put to a referendum before a presidential election in June, when the ruling generals should step down.

The BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo says liberals fear the Muslim Brotherhood and the ruling military council will strike an agreement to entrench the army's privileges and the brotherhood's control over Egyptian society.

Liberal and secular parties polled badly, with the New Wafd securing 38 seats, the Egyptian bloc 35 and the Reform and Development Party 10.

The Revolution Continues, a group formed by youth activists behind the uprising that ousted Mr Mubarak, won only seven seats.

The Muslim Brotherhood's General Guide, Mohammed Badie, said in December the Freedom and Justice Party would form a broad coalition if it won the elections.



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Sunday, October 2, 2011

Egypt parties threaten poll boycott, protest planned

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Teachers protest during a strike in front of the Prime Minister's office in downtown Cairo, September 24, 2011. Thousands of Egyptian teachers demonstrated outside the cabinet office in central Cairo on Saturday, demanding higher pay and the sacking of the education minister. The sign on left reads: ''Yes to education reform. We don't want a minister of education''. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany

Teachers protest during a strike in front of the Prime Minister's office in downtown Cairo, September 24, 2011. Thousands of Egyptian teachers demonstrated outside the cabinet office in central Cairo on Saturday, demanding higher pay and the sacking of the education minister. The sign on left reads: ''Yes to education reform. We don't want a minister of education''.

Credit: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El-Ghany

By Tamim Elyan

CAIRO | Thu Sep 29, 2011 8:35am EDT

CAIRO (Reuters) - Political parties from across Egypt's political spectrum threatened to boycott elections scheduled to start in November unless the country's military rulers amend the election law.

Parties made their boycott threat in a joint statement late on Wednesday as some activists prepared a protest in Cairo for Friday. They hope it will attract thousands of people unhappy with the generals who took over from veteran president Hosni Mubarak when he was forced out by popular protests in February.

But some Islamists, including the powerful Muslim Brotherhood, said they would not protest, giving the army time to respond.

The United States also put pressure on the interim government, saying it hoped Egypt's emergency law -- widely seen as a tool of repression under Mubarak -- would be scrapped sooner than the military foresees next year.

About 60 political parties and groups, including the political wing of the Brotherhood, have set a deadline of Sunday for the military council to meet their demands. These include approving a law that would effectively prevent many of those who supported Mubarak while he was in power from running for office.

Without it, the parties said they would not take part in the elections: "We will boycott if they have not responded positively to our demands by Sunday," Sayyid al-Badawi, the head of the Wafd party, told Reuters.

The Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party is now the largest and best organized party in Egypt, since Mubarak's National Democratic Party was dissolved by court order.

The military council said on Tuesday that parliamentary elections would start in stages from November 28, and invited candidates to start registering for the poll from October 12.

Under rules approved by the council, which took over for after Mubarak's overthrow, party lists may compete for two thirds of seats in parliament, to be allocated regionally by proportional representation, while the rest are constituency seats reserved for unaffiliated individual candidates.

Badawi said all the parties had agreed to set the demands in the statement to allow parties to field candidates on both regional party lists and for individual constituency seats.

MUBARAK'S TIMELINE

Egypt's military rulers said last week that the emergency law would remain in place until June next year, in keeping with a timeline set by Mubarak while he was trying to hold on to power in the face of mass demonstrations.

However, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for a faster end to the law, which was reactivated two days after a September 9 attack by protesters on the Israeli embassy in Cairo.

"We hope to see the law lifted sooner than that because we think that is an important step on the way to the rule of law and to the kind of system of checks and balances that are important in protecting the rights of the Egyptian people," she said in Washington on Wednesday.

"We want to see this as soon as possible," she told a news conference with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr.

Egyptian parties want the military council to activate a "Treason Law" issued in the 1950s to fight political corruption and abuse of office. In August, the government revived an amended version of the law, state news agency MENA reported. It was sent to the military council but has yet to be approved.

Under the law, any government official, member of parliament or minister may be punished for abuse of power if they, their relatives or acquaintances benefited from public office they held. Activists said the law would effectively bar many Mubarak loyalists from running for office for 10 years.

PROTESTS

Activists who led the protests that ousted Mubarak have been rallying Egyptians to join Friday's demonstration, hoping to press the military council to scrap the emergency laws. They also want a clear road map for handing power to civilians.

Mohamed Saad el-Katatni, secretary-general of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party, said the group or party would not participate on Friday. "We have made our demands in statements and we expect the military council to respond in the next few days," he told Reuters.

He added the Brotherhood and its party would review their position with other parties on Sunday, depending on the army's response.

Al-Gama'a al-Islamiya, another group, also said it would not take part in the Friday's demonstration.

Activists have staged a series of small, spontaneous demonstrations across Cairo this week in what analysts say could mark a return to the tactics of the January 25 uprising.

"We are returning to civil resistance as we see Mubarak's regime still in place," said Mahmoud Afify, a spokesman for the April 6 Movement, which helped to lead the uprising.

The military council has portrayed itself as the protector of the revolution but has increasingly come under pressure to hand over power to civilians more quickly.

Activists have called for a massive protest on Tahrir Square, center of the uprising that ousted Mubarak, with activists hoping it would be one of the biggest since February. Egypt's benchmark stock index ended at a 29-month low because of worries about Friday's protests.

Parties want elections held on the basis of an entirely party list-based system of proportional representation, rather than a mixed system which they say will allow Mubarak loyalists to use wealth and tribal influence to buy their way to individual constituency seats.

(Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed in Washington; Writing by Sami Aboudi and Edmund Blair; Editing by David Stamp and Alastair Macdonald)



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Egypt bloc in poll boycott threat

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29 September 2011 Last updated at 00:14 GMT Military council leader Field Marshal Mohamad Tantawi Egypt's ruling military council, led by Field Marshal Mohamad Tantawi, has been set a deadline Political groups in Egypt, including the Muslim Brotherhood, are threatening to boycott parliamentary elections unless a disputed law is amended.

They object to an electoral law which allows a third of seats to be filled by independent candidates rather than political parties.

The political bloc has set a deadline of Sunday for Egypt's military rulers to meet their demands.

A statement demanded parties be allowed to contest all seats.

Elections are due to begin on 28 November. The Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Equality party is widely seen as the most formidable contender.

"We reject participation in the elections unless the article is changed," said the statement, signed by a coalition of The Democratic Alliance - which includes 37 parties - and the Freedom and Equality party.

The head of the Wafd party, Sayyid al-Badawi, said the elections would be boycotted if the government did not respond positively.

However, some officials of the Muslim Brotherhood tried to downplay the threat, saying the group would not boycott the vote.

Many Egyptian political groups say voting for a party rather than a single candidate will make it harder for former members of ousted leader Hosni Mubarak's now-outlawed party to run.

Emergency laws

The coalition has also demanded that Egypt's ruling military council ban officials involved in the misuse of power under Mr Mubarak from standing in elections for the next 10 years.

They also want the lifting of emergency laws which were reactivated earlier this month after protesters ransacked the Israeli embassy in Cairo.

On Wednesday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also called on the military government to lift the state of emergency as soon as possible.

She said the US wanted to see it happen sooner than the planned date of June next year, because it was "an important step on the way to the rule of law".

She was speaking after a meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister Muhammed Amr in Washington.

Mrs Clinton described Egypt's ruling military council as "an institution of stability and continuity".



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Peliculas Online

Monday, September 19, 2011

Egypt election timetable proposed

 Egyptian protesters in Tahrir Square, Cairo, 16 Sept Many Egyptians have been pressing the military council on an election timetable Egypt's ruling military council has proposed the date of 21 November for the start of the first parliamentary elections since the fall of President Hosni Mubarak, media say.A formal announcement is expected to be made next week.
The elections are likely to be held in three stages, so the process will take more than a month.
No date has been set for a presidential election, which is not expected to take place until March or April.
Minister sentenced
Egyptian media quoted the election commission head, Abdel Moez Ibrahim, as saying voting for the lower house, the People's Assembly, would be in three stages, the first on 21 November and the last on 3 January.
Upper house elections would spread from 22 January to 4 March.
State news agency Mena quoted a source at the commission as saying the ruling council would fix the dates in a decree on 26 September.
The BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo says the opposition will be hoping that these are the first fully free elections to be held after many decades of notoriously corrupt votes.
The opposition has been pressing the military to announce a timetable for the return of civilian rule.
Our correspondent says the long timescale for the presidential elections actually suits many of the new opposition movements, which say they need more time to get themselves organised.
But he says they will be looking closely at the details, to make sure that the system really does allow Egypt to evolve into a proper democracy.
Hosni Mubarak was ousted from his 30-year rule after protests this year and is on trial over the deaths of demonstrators and on corruption charges.
Separately on Sunday, former Tourism Minister Zoheir Garranah was jailed for three years for unlawfully issuing company licences.
Garranah is already serving a five-year term imposed in May for misusing public funds.