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Showing posts with label boycott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boycott. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Egypt parties threaten poll boycott, protest planned

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
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

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
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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