Archive for Mohamed Abdel Alim Dawoud

 

Six more members of the Constituent Assembly withdrew from the body in the two days since President Mohamed Morsy issued a new constitutional declaration Thursday, bringing the total number of resigned original and reserve members to 29, according to the state-run Sawt al-Shaab television station.

On Sunday, Mohamed Anwar al-Sadat, president of the centrist Reform and Development Party, said he would freeze his assembly membership until the body met the demands of political forces opposed to the new constitutional decree.

Of the assembly’s 100 total members, 22 original appointees have resigned, along with seven reserve members who do not sit in the body. All of the 29 come from either secular political forces or represent Christian churches.

The assembly met Saturday with less than half of its members in attendance.

In response to the recent wave of resignations, Constituent Assembly President Hossam al-Gheriany, a prominent former judicial figure that observers say is close to the Morsy-aligned Muslim Brotherhood, urged the members to return and finish what they had started. He reminded the resigned members that they had contributed to drafting the constitution from the beginning and agreed on many of its articles.

In Sunday’s assembly session, which was also sparsely attended, Gheriany said the assembly — selected by the People’s Assembly and Shura Council — is completely independent.

“The government has not interfered with our work since we started,” he said.

In response to the Morsy declaration’s extension of the assembly’s work for two more months, Gheriany said, “We do not need the extra time, as we will finish by the declared deadline.”

“The turmoil that is taking place now will end once we have a new constitution and an elected Parliament,” he added.

But such an outcome seemed increasingly unlikely given the recent resignations. Three representatives of the liberal Ghad al-Thawra Party withdrew on Saturday, citing their exclusion from the assembly’s drafting subcommittee in addition to Morsy’s declaration.
Mohamed Abdel Alim Dawoud, an influential figure in the the liberal Wafd Party, and Farouq Guweida, a widely respected poet and intellectual, also withdrew on Saturday.

On 17 November, Bishop Paula of Tanta’s Coptic Orthodox Church, Bishop Yohana Qalta, the assistant to the Catholic patriarch of Egypt, and Safwat al-Bayadi, the head of the Anglican Communion in Egypt, all withdrew from the assembly. The Wafd Party withdrew four of its representatives on the same day.

The next day, April 6 Youth Movement leader Ahmed Maher, former Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa, famous TV commentator Hamdy Qandil and former coordinator of the Freedom and Justice Party-led Democratic Alliance Wahid Abdel Meguid withdrew. They were followed by representatives of the Journalists Syndicate head council and the representative of the Farmers Syndicate, Mohamed Abdel Qader, on 20 November.

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The Wafd Party decided to withdraw from the constituent assembly following a joint meeting Tuesday for the party’s supreme authority and its parliamentary bloc.

Abdel Aziz al-Nahhas, the party’s assistant secretary general, said the decision was based on consensus between the two authorities.

Wafd withdrew because of the assembly makeup, which represents the parliamentary majority of Islamists but doesn’t conform to the principle that constitution writing should be based on consensus among all segments of society, not just the parliamentary majority, said Hossam al-Khouly, another assistant secretary general of the party.

Parliament elected four Wafd Party members to the committee tasked with writing the constitution: party chief Al-Sayed al-Badawy, parliamentary bloc leader Mahmoud al-Saqqa, People’s Assembly Deputy Speaker Mohamed Abdel Alim Dawoud, and party Assistant Secretary General Margaret Azer.

Meanwhile, independent MP Amr al-Shobaky and Ahmed Sayed al-Naggar, an expert at Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, officially announced their withdrawal from the assembly.

Shobaky said on Tuesday that he withdrew because the assembly makeup will lead to the writing of a constitution that doesn’t express all social segments. The constitution is not an award granted to the majority, he added.

The transition period has already led to the loss of a whole year in problems with the constitution and elections that left out reform and construction, Shobaky said, adding that the mistake was made from the beginning when the ruling military council was left without a civilian partner.

Naggar also said the current formation of the assembly turned to a sharply polarized national issue.

Translated from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The Americans who were accused of receiving illegal foreign funding for civil society organizations arrived at Cairo Airport on Thursday to leave for the United States after their travel ban was lifted, despite the serious charge of imminently threatening Egyptian national security that was leveled at them by the investigating judge.

The Egyptian authorities had on Wednesday lifted the ban on 43 NGO employees of different nationalities, including 16 American citizens. Only seven of the 16 accused Americans remained in Cairo, and they were escorted to the airport by US embassy personnel.

The case has caused tension in relations between Egypt and the United States.

The International Republican Institute, one of the non-profits under investigation, welcomed Egypt's decision to lift travel bans imposed on its staff, but said it remained concerned over Egypt's investigation of civil society groups and hopeful that all charges would be dropped, Reuters reported.

The institute said in a statement it remained very concerned about the situation "and the impact it will have on Egypt's ability to move forward with the democratic transition that so many Egyptians have sought."

Meanwhile, MP Mohamed Abdel Alim Dawoud, undersecretary of the People's Assembly, submitted a request for information to Prime Minister Kamal al-Ganzouri and Justice Minister Adel Abdel Hamid Thursday regarding what he called the “crime” of lifting the travel ban and the failure to take firm action in this case.

“The American ambassador talked about the possibility of ending the problem soon, which is interference in the work of the judiciary and a manifestation of US pressure on decision makers in Egypt,” Dawoud said.

A statement that Al-Sayed al-Badawy, president of the Wafd Party, praised the presiding judge, Judge Mohamed Shoukry, for stepping down from the case.

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