Archive for Hatem Abdel Azim

The parliamentary bloc of the Freedom and Justice Party agreed to stop the escalation against Egypt’s military rulers after the latter promised a limited cabinet reshuffle, Al-Masry Al-Youm reported on Monday.

The paper added that the parliamentary bloc also approved not including ministers from the Muslim Brotherhood in the new government.

“We were studying means of escalation against the government,” said bloc member Gomaa al-Badri. “But we approved the reshuffle as the rest of the government is leaving soon anyway.”

On Sunday, the Brotherhood said the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces planned a cabinet shuffle to defuse a political feud before the presidential elections. The Brotherhood has been pushing for more influence in the government for months, since they entered Parliament with the largest bloc in February.

Saad al-Husseini, member of the party’s executive bureau, said that the SCAF has responded to the will of the people and the parliament of the revolution by agreeing to a reshuffle, according to Al-Masry Al-Youm.

On the possibility of holding demonstrations if the reshuffle did not take place, Husseini said the SCAF will follow through. “They called us,” he said.

Saber Abdel Sadeq, a member of the party’s executive bureau, said the reshuffle should include the ministries of foreign affairs, transport, petroleum, supply and manpower for the many crises they caused and failed to resolve.

“The Brotherhood does not want to be part of a transitional government, though this might make some claim we evade responsibility,” he said.

Bloc member Hatem Abdel Azim said the reshuffle should include the service ministries. “We will not be part of it so as to keep our impartiality in the presidential election,” he said.

Since being appointed by the army in November, Prime Minister Kamal al-Ganzouri has struggled to build momentum for reforms and mend the economy.

On Sunday, the Freedom and Justice Party-led Parliament suspended meetings for a week, saying the SCAF had ignored their demands for a cabinet that is reflective of the makeup of Parliament.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm
 

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The Freedom and Justice Party’s parliamentary bloc on Saturday endorsed the criteria formulated in a meeting between the ruling military council and political parties regarding the formation of the Constituent Assembly.

‘“The FJP would be represented by 15 members in the assembly” according to the proposal, said bloc member Hatem Abdel Azim. “Other political parties are free to choose representatives from within or outside Parliament.”

Abdel Azim explained that the new criteria are positive steps, as it has been agreed that the criteria for forming the Constituent Assembly will be laid out in a law. This would allow Parliament to retain the right to formulate an appropriate law, and take jurisdiction away from an administrative court, he added.

“The party is still contemplating the members it will nominate for the assembly,” he said.

Wahid Abdel Meguid, coordinator of the FJP-led Democratic Alliance and a member of the mediation committee to resolve the crisis over the Constituent Assembly, said the joint session of the People’s Assembly and Shura Council to elect the assembly members would be determined once all political parties announce their position on the formation criteria recommendations.

He added that certain issues have still not been resolved, such as one, raised at the meeting, that all 18 parties represented in Parliament should also be represented in the assembly. The first time the Constituent Assembly was formed, it was decided that only 11 parties would be included to allow for more representation from outside the political sphere.

In a meeting with political parties on Saturday, the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces said that the constitution should be crafted before the presidential election runoff.

The meeting also decided that four members of the assembly would include four Al-Azhar representatives, six Egyptian church representatives, 10 legal and constitutional scholars, two farmers’ representatives and two labor representatives, as well as general representatives for women, student movements and those with special needs.

Mohamed Morsy, the FJP’s presidential candidate and president of the party, did not attend the meeting.

The new agreement on the assembly’s formation comes on the heels of a previous fiasco, when the State Council’s Administrative Court ruled a mostly Islamist and MP-dominated Constituent Assembly dissolved earlier this month.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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