Archive for presidential candidate

Prosecutor General Talaat Abdallah agreed to assign a judge to investigate allegations of treason levied against Constitution Party leader Mohamed ElBaradei and former presidential candidates Amr Moussa and Hamdeen Sabbahi.

Al-Sayed Hamed, a member of the executive bureau of the Lawyers Syndicate’s Freedoms Committee, filed the charges along with his colleague, Nasser al-Asqalany.

ElBaradei, Moussa and Sabbahi lead the National Salvation Front, a coalition of 15 liberal parties opposed to the recently instated Constitution. They claim the constitutional referendum was rigged.

Prior to the referendum, the front led demonstrations against the Constitution in front of the presidential palace. At least ten died in the course of clashes with supporters of President Mohamed Morsy.

Hamed is also bringing charges of treason against former presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq, Dubai police chief Dahi Khalfan, Judges Club head Ahmed al-Zend and Supreme Constitutional Court Vice President Tahani al-Gebali.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Two former presidential candidates are speculating about the results of the second phase of the referendum on Saturday, after the draft constitution won 56 percent approval from voters during the first phase last week.

Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh, head of the Strong Egypt Party and a former presidential candidate, said that he expects the second stage of the referendum to be “a carbon copy” of the first. 

An estimated 31 percent of voters in 10 governorates went to the polls on Saturday, 15 December. The remaining 17 governorates are scheduled to vote on Saturday.

Abouel Fotouh said he wished the new constitution would receive a 90 percent majority, with a voter turnout of around 70 percent. That way, Egypt would have a new constitution that satisfies the people, so that the country could move past the current state of polarization, which he blamed on the political leadership as well as the opposition.

He described the political polarization as “elitist,” adding that even though his party rejects the draft constitution, it recognizes that people should yield to popular will as represented in the referendum results, Qatar News Agency reported.

“We do not reject the constitution in its entirety. Regrettably, constitutions are not put to referendum as articles. Had we been asked to vote on articles separately [rather than on the whole document] we would have accepted most of its articles and only rejected those to which we object,” he said.

Abouel Fotouh added that he has objective reasons for rejecting the constitution that are disconnected from ongoing political disagreements.

Ahmed Shafiq, a member of former President Hosni Mubarak’s regime who lost to this year's presidential election to Mohamed Morsy, expected results in the second phase of voting to mirror the results of the presidential election. He anticipated that people would vote “yes” or “no” based on their opinion of the Muslim Brotherhood and Morsy. 

He said he hopes residents in the Delta governorate of Monufiya “will play a major role in serving Egypt” when they head to the polls Saturday.

Monufiya gave Shafiq approximately half of its total votes in the first round of the presidential election and over 70 percent of the votes in the second round, which concluded in June.

On Thursday, Shafiq said on his Twitter account, “I will remain indebted to the people of Monufiya for as long as I live. I hope their role in serving Egypt next Saturday does not fall short of expectations.”

Edited translation from MENA and Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Former presidential candidate and Egyptian National Congress Party head Amr Moussa threatened a harsh reaction if the government insists on implementing measures harmful to Egypt, such as the draft constitution that is currently under referendum.

Moussa issued the statement on his Facebook page on Tuesday evening.

Political forces organized anti-referendum marches to the presidential palace and Tahrir Square today. Leading those forces was the National Salvation Front, a group of secular forces led by Moussa, former presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi and Constitution Party leader Mohamed ElBaradei.

They demand the dissolution of the Islamist-dominated Constituent Assembly and the formation of a new body to draft a more representative constitution based on national consensus.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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A number of members of the Hazemoun movement attacked patrons at downtown Cairo cafes, including the well-known Borsa cafe, late Sunday.

The Hazemoun members, comprised of former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail's supporters, were accompanied by members of the "Ahrar" movement, a self-styled vigilante youth group enforcing public virtue, according to eyewitnesses.

Al-Shorouk newspaper quoted eyewitnesses as saying that a number of people were injured in the attack, including political activitsts known to frequent the cafes. Witnesses added that Hazemon and Ahrar members fired birdshot and launched fireworks during the attack.

While lighting off fireworks, members of the movements also chanted "Sharia is a lifestyle," according to eyewitnesses.

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Hundreds of Islamists gathered around the Wafd Party headquarters in Dokki on Saturday night, chanting loudly and using fireworks, Egypt Independent witnessed.

Shortly after, gunshots were heard and tear gas bombs were thrown in the area. Magdy Sarhan, the editor of Al-Wafd daily, told CBC satellite channel that party members were been trapped inside the building.

Although the identity of the attackers was not clear, members of the Wafd Party accused Hazemoun, the followers of Salafi sheikh and former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail, of perpetrating an attack against them.

But Fouad Badrawy, secretary general of the party, denied earlier that the party received any threats. In statement to Al-Masry Al-Youm, Badrawy said that the Central Security Forces sent eight cars to secure the headquarters from potential threats. 

After the apparent attack, CSF soldiers were deployed outside the headquarters and dispersed the protesters.

The Popular Current, former presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi’s political party, reported that the Hazemoun group has been circulating a call for a gathering in Mohandiseen to besiege the headquarters of the current on Facebook.

Representatives of the current added in a statement that some members received phone threats about supporters of Abu Ismail intending to invade their headquarters. They held the government responsible for any attack on them.

Islamists are also apparently en route to protest outside the headquarters of the privately owned dailies Al-Watan and Al-Masry Al-Youm.

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Supporters of former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail continued their sit-in outside of Media Production City for the fourth day to demand the “cleansing of the media of certain talk show hosts.”

They canceled a mass demonstration that was planned for Monday in order to avoid confrontations with what they called “thugs” intending to sabotage state institutions.

The protesters moved from Gate Four to the main gate, prompting the police to increase their presence out of fear they would storm the studios.

They put up 150 tents, with some of them sleeping on mattresses in the park and covering their faces from the cold. A tent caught fire when a protester lit wood for heating, but the fire was controlled.

The demonstrators also built five brick bathrooms in the park and connected them to the sewage network.

They formed inspection committees and human shields on both sides of the road, carrying banners supporting President Mohamed Morsy and the 15 December referendum on the draft constitution.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Prosecutor General Talaat Ibrahim Abdallah referred to investigators Sunday a complaint that people from the judiciary, politics and journalism are "plotting to overthrow the government."

Judicial sources told the media that Abdallah instructed the North Giza public prosecutor to start a judicial investigation into the report, which was submitted by lawyer Hamed Seddiq.

The list of people accused in the report include Tahani al-Gebali, vice president of the Supreme Constitutional Court; Ahmed al-Zend, head of the Judges Club; Mostafa Bakry, editor-in-chief of Al-Osbou newspaper; Shawqy al-Sayyed, secretary of former presidential candidate Ahmed Shafiq; Hamdeen Sabbahi, former presidential candidate; and lawyer Mortada Mansour.

The report accused the public figures of "conspiring with others, and planning to overthrow the government, create chaos, sabotage the country, threaten the people, shed blood and destroy public and private property."

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Dozens of demonstrators protested in front of the presidential palace on Saturday evening, in solidarity with the ongoing sit-in of hundreds of demonstrators.

The protesters' main demands are the repeal of President Mohamed Morsy's 22 November constitutional declaration expanding his powers, and the halt of a planned referendum on the new draft constitution which is planned for 15 December.

Central security forces stationed at the palace continued to prevent traffic from passing in front of the palace and on its side streets, refusing to remove part of the concrete wall on Merghani Street.

Meanwhile, Salafi preacher and former presidential candidate Hazem Salah Abu Ismail called for the palace protesters to vacate the area by tomorrow. He called on his supporters to go and break up the sit-in if the protesters had not left by then.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Clashes have erupted between anti-Morsy protesters and Islamists in front of the presidential palace, privately-owned TV channel Al-Nahar has reported.

The TV channel, in live reports from the scene, said that Morsy supporters boxed opposition protesters in from two sides, leading to scuffles.

The clashes come after both the Popular Current, led by former presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabbahi, and the Muslim Brotherhood called for rival demonstrations outside the presidential palace Wednesday, raising the specter of clashes between both sides.

FormerThe Brotherhood's earlier call for protests, with anti-Morsy protesters already staging a sit-in outside the palace, drew condemnations and warnings from opposing political parties.

Former presidential candidate Amr Moussa, who is also chairman of the Egyptian NationalEgyptian National Congress Party, denounced the Brotherhood’s call for protests.

“Clashes with other protesters over differences in opinion will further heat up the situation,” Moussa tweeted on Wednesday.

The ConstitutionParty also warned of "dire consequences" for what it described asassaults on peaceful protesters in Tahrir Square and outside the palace.

"We are warning of dire consequences for mounting calls by figures affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamist current,” the party said in a statement, which claimed that the president’s supporters had called for massive protests “and even jihad.”

In a statement posted on the group's Facebook page, Brotherhood Spokesperson Mahmoud Ghozlan said that the calls for demonstrations were meant to "protect the legitimacy after the brute infringements conducted on Tuesday by a group that thought they could shake legitimacy or impose their opinion by force."

Dozens of anti-Mohamed Morsy protesters are staging a sit-in outside the presidential palace in Heliopolis after thousands-strong marches to the palace Tuesday night in protest of the president's rush to put the constitution up for a vote, as well as his constitutional declaration last month granting him broad powers.

Earlier on Tuesday, the website of state-run Al-Ahram newspaper quoted a Jama'a al-Islamiya source as saying that various Islamist factions will gather at the palace to support Morsy. The Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, the Salafi-oriented Nour Party and Jama'a al-Islamiya’s Construction and Development Party are among the groups that will participate, according to Al-Ahram.

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Leading Socialist Popular Alliance Party member and former presidential candidate Abul Ezz al-Hariry accused a number of Muslim Brotherhood supporters of assaulting him Saturday in Alexandria.

In a press statement, Hariry said that he sustained facial and chest injuries after he was attacked in the Sidi Gaber area of Alexandria.  His wife also suffered a facial injury in the attack.

According to Hariry, the attack occurred while he was driving his car with his wife near the Muslim Brotherhood's headquarters while clashes between protesters and security forces were happening nearby. A number of Muslim Brotherhood members demonstrating in support of President Mohamed Morsy attacked him.

Hariry filed a complaint at the police department accusing Brotherhood members Saber Abul Fotouh and Ali Abdel Fattah of assault.

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