Archive for presidential hopeful

Former presidential hopeful and Strong Egypt Party founder Abdel Moneim Abouel Fotouh has accused opposition forces of allying with the vestiges of the Mubarak regime, while also criticizing the role of the Muslim Brotherhood in government matters and certain points in the draft constitution.

In a statement made Thursday evening on the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera channel, Abouel Fotouh called on President Mohamed Morsy to clarify to what extent the Muslim Brotherhood was involved in presidential affairs.

In the midst of a growing divide between Islamists and their opponents over the draft constitution, Abouel Fotouh hasn’t declared a firm position. He has criticized the ruling regime, but also distanced himself from oppositional secular forces.

"There is a taboo marriage between some opposition parties and the remnants [of Mubarak regime], and they should repent and protest peacefully like we do. Opposition differs from walking on the road to destruction," Abouel Fotouh said.

He condemned all parties involved in the presidential palace clashes, decrying "those who lost rationality and sent citizens under the guise of protecting the presidential palace." The state security apparatus is supposed to be responsible for safeguarding the president and his palace, he added.

"The guidance bureau (the Muslim Brotherhood's supreme body) should be asked if it is directing the president, and it must cease if this is true. As for the president, we have to oppose him peacefully, and cooperate with him if he does right,” Abouel Fotouh continued.

"It is a shame on the president and an insult to Egyptians if he becomes a plaything in any person's hands. Both parties, the president and the [Brotherhood] group, should prove themselves innocent of that."

Abouel Fotouh said he rejects calls to boycott the constitutional referendum, and that the Strong Egypt Party would participate to show their confidence in the judiciary. Abouel Fotouh urged judges to supervise the referendum regardless of their opinion of the draft constitution.

The Strong Egypt Party had submitted objections on the constitution draft and provided written proposals to head of the Constituent Assembly Hossam al-Gheriany after the first draft was issued on 14 October, Abouel Fotouh noted.

"We did not wait for the final draft to come out as some others have done, but we practiced our role and made written proposals. That is what everybody should have done,” he claimed.

The Strong Egypt Party’s objections to the draft revolved around issues of social justice, presidential powers and the privileges of the military institution. Abouel Fotouh did not mention the controversial question of freedoms, which has been a major issue for other opposition parties.

"It cannot be that the philosophy of the constitution of a country like Egypt, where 70 percent of its citizens are poor and 40 percent are below poverty line, to neglect social justice and providing care for the poor … (nor can we) constitutionalize military dominance, which has become a fact since 1952," he said.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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A number of youth movements and political parties announced they would not participate in a Tahrir Square protest planned for Friday.

Disqualified presidential hopeful and Salafi leader Hazem Salah Abu Ismail and the Youth for Freedom and Justice Movement have called the protest to demand the release of protesters arrested by military police in Abbasseya last Friday, as well as to defend their right to demonstrate peacefully.

Hundreds of protesters were detained last week when a demonstration in the Cairo neighborhood turned violent outside the Defense Ministry, resulting in the death of one soldier. At least 11 people died in clashes at the same protest earlier in the week.

The April 6 Youth Movement-Ahmed Maher Front said it would not take part in tomorrow's demonstration because its members are busy with a campaign against presidential candidates who served under Mubarak's regime, as well as a campaign to monitor the presidential election. The front also added that the objectives of the demonstration were unclear.

The National Association for Change warned against enticing revolutionaries to support causes that only serve personal or party interests as part of the struggle for power. The association called on revolutionary movements to avoid "traps set for them" that could harm national interests.
Giving priority to upcoming election, the liberal Wafd Party said it would not take part in any protests because it wants the transition from military to civilian rule to be completed as soon as possible. The party expressed support for the Presidential Elections Commission.

The leftist Tagammu Party said it has no plans to join the protest because it is merely a show of power aiming to intimidate voters to support the Brotherhood's candidate, Mohamed Morsy, in the presidential election.

These comments came despite the Muslim Brotherhood’s decision not to participate in the demonstration. The group said the presidential election is more important, adding that the country needs stability and that officials have already heard the people's demands.

Farid Ismail, a leader of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, said these demands could be summarized as handing over power to civilians no later than 30 June and taking necessary measures to ensure the integrity of presidential election, as was the case with the parliamentary elections.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Postponing the presidential election until the body writing the new constitution finishes its work is unacceptable under any circumstance, said presidential hopeful Hamdeen Sabbahi Tuesday.

In a press statement, Sabbahi emphasized: “There is a binding date that has been announced for the handover of power to an elected president.”

Sahhabi’s remarks came after Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, head of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, met with the heads of around 20 political parties and several members of Parliament on Sunday. In the meeting, he requested that the constitution be written before 30 June, according to state-run news agency MENA.

“The Egyptian people, who endured more than a year and a half of mismanagement during the interim period to reach this moment in which they can elect their president, will never allow anyone to prolong the transitional period further or put off the handover of power,” the Nasserist candidate continued.

Sabbahi said the constitution should ideally be drafted before the presidential election begins. He blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for causing the current crisis over the new constitution, the writing of which was suspended by a court ruling earlier this month. Sabbahi added, however, that this standoff should not provide any justification to postpone the presidential contest.

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Presidential hopeful and former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq attacked on Saturday the amendment to the political rights law which would prevent high-ranking former regime officials from running for president until the tenth anniversary of Mubarak's ouster. Parliament approved the amendment on Thursday.

He described the amendment as "an attempt to impose trusteeship over Egyptians, an overstep of the supposed balance of powers, and a hijacking of the democratic process in favor of certain figures."  

Shafiq called the Islamist-backed Friday protest in Tahrir Square that rejected the presidential candidacy of former regime figures "an attempt to divide and impose guardianship on Egyptians."

He stressed that he "will stay in the presidential race until the end" and that he "abides by the decisions of the Presidential Elections Commission, seeks the votes of all Egyptians and respects everyone."

Shafiq expressed great confidence in the awareness of the people and their ability to choose a president who can achieve their aspirations and ambitions.

In response to accusations that he favored certain companies for construction contracts during his tenure as civil aviation minister under Mubarak, Shafiq said, "I challenge anyone to prove that the work of Terminal 3 at Cairo airport was assigned by direct order [to specific companies]."

"The establishment of this massive project was carried out with full transparency through a competitive tender in which several companies and international alliances participated. [The tender] was subject to dual technical and legal supervision according to Egyptian laws and the rules of the World Bank, which funded the construction process."    
 

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The Administrative Court at the State Council will consider on 24 April the lawsuit filed by presidential hopeful and MP Abul Ezz al-Hariry against Khairat al-Shater, the Muslim Brotherhood's presidential candidate, demanding the cancellation of Shater’s pardon by the ruling military council.

Judge Ali Fekry Saleh, deputy head of the State Council, is will preside over the case after the original judge stepped down citing “discomfort” and in response to a request from the Muslim Brotherhood’s lawyers, who worried the judge had already formed an opinion before the hearing began because he’d disqualified Ayman Nour from candidacy in a similar case a few days before.

Sobhy Saleh, Brotherhood leader and Shater's lawyer had called in his first statement before the court on Wednesday for the original judge to step down and for the case to be referred to another court.

Hariry has demanded that Shater be excluded from the presidential race under a law that bans pardoned prisoners from exercising their political rights for six years after being pardoned as a supplementary and consequential punishment.

Hariry opined that any pardon should be in the form of a general amnesty decree, stressing the rehabilitation of Shater’s political rights was illegal because six years had not passed since he was pardoned. Hariry added that pardoning Shater was in violation of Article 56 of the Constitutional Declaration, which stipulates that general amnesty can only be granted through the issuance of a law.

Translated from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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The head judge of a court reviewing a lawsuit against Muslim Brotherhood presidential hopeful Khairat al-Shater's candidacy has stepped down.

State-run newspaper Al-Ahram reported on its website that the head of the court decided to remove himself from the case in accordance with a request from Shater's lawyers.

Privately owned newspaper Youm7's website quoted Brotherhood lawyer Abdel Moneim Abdel Maqsoud as saying that the court panel decided to step down after judging a similar case of presidential hopeful Ayman Nour and nullifying his nomination.

Abdel Maqsoud said Shater's legal team called on the head of the court to step down, fearing he had already formed an opinion about the case ahead of the hearing.

MP and presidential candidate Abul Ezz al-Hariry filed the lawsuit against the pardon Shater had received from the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.

In the lawsuit — filed against Presidential Elections Commission head Farouk Sultan, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi and Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim — Hariry said the decision to pardon Shater was illegal and in violation of the interim constitution.

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Presidential hopeful Hamdeen Sabbahi will officially submit his nomination papers to the Presidential Elections Commission on Friday, his electoral campaign announced.

Supporters, campaign members and several public figures will accompany Sabbahi, the campaign said Tuesday.

The campaign said all of Sabbahi’s endorsement signatures — more than 30,000 — have been counted. Despite exceeding the required number, the campaign said more proxies are still being made and submitted from different governorates.

Sabbahi will hold a press conference before the commission after submitting his papers to outline his electoral platform.

Translated from MENA

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The Construction and Development Party, Jama’a al-Islamiya’s political arm, will not support any presidential hopeful linked to the former regime or Egypt’s current military leaders, the party has said.

Safwat Abdel Ghany, head of the political office for the party, told independent newspaper Youm7 that the party will announce whose bid it will support in the presidential election after the door is closed to nominations.

Candidates with connections to the former regime or the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Force include former Arab League chief Amr Moussa, former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq and Advisory Council head Mansour Hassan, he said.

The party stands at an equal distance from all Islamist presidential candidates, he added.

The party met with presidential hopeful Abdallah al-Ashal last week. Abdel Ghany said Ashal, a former assistant foreign minister, has adopted several patriotic stances, adding that the party shares certain ideas with the candidate, who has an Islamist frame of reference.

Abdel Ghany said the party plans to hold similar meetings with other candidates. Presidential hopeful Mohamed Selim al-Awa had asked Jama’a al-Islamiya to support his candidacy.

Translated from Al-Masry Al-Youm

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Foreign countries are funding the campaigns of potential candidates for president, presidential hopeful Abdullah al-Ashal said Tuesday for the second time in two months.

“Ninety percent of the presidential hopefuls receive funds from abroad, and this is obvious in some of their campaigns,” Ashal, a former deputy foreign minister, said during a meeting with Egyptian expatriates in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh on Tuesday.

Ashal alleged that some presidential aspirants had opened headquarters across Egypt and were able to pay monthly salaries to thousands of campaign workers. He said he has filed a report with the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to investigate the issue, and claimed that some candidates have paid LE50,000 to appear on satellite TV channels.

“This is dangerous and requires reviewing such satellite channels that work with private agendas, without taking Egypt’s interests into consideration,” he said.

Ashal did not provide any evidence to back up his claims.

Privately owned newspaper Youm7 reported similar statements by Ashal during a January meeting in Sharqiya, where he said that all other presidential hopefuls receive funding from foreign countries to support their presidential campaigns.

Hopefuls Mohamed Selim al-Awa and Amr Moussa have already denied allegations they receive donations from foreign backers.

Egypt's presidential elections are expected to take place in early June, although the date has not yet been announced. The registration process for would-be candidates is scheduled to begin next month.

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More presidential hopefuls this week have rejected the idea of a consensus candidate for Egypt’s upcoming presidential race.

Islamist hopeful Hazem Salah Abu Ismail on Monday said he rejected the idea because most of those who would seek to become a consensus candidate are already in power, “which is not a political consensus but a conspiracy.”

Egypt’s newspapers have recently reported and discussed the idea of a consensus candidate for president, referring to Arab League Secretary General Nabil al-Araby as a potential presidential hopeful.

News about Araby’s potential nomination circulated in dailies such as Al-Shorouk, Al-Tahrir and Al-Masry Al-Youm. Reports said Araby might be chosen as the consensus candidate for the Muslim Brotherhood and the ruling military council.

In a phone call from Paris on Sunday, presidential hopeful Mohamed Selim al-Awa told a talk show on the privately owned channel CBC that only Egyptians can decide and choose a president.

“The idea of a consensus president is one of the world’s nine wonders,” he said. “It’s impossible for all people to agree on one person. Consensus can be accepted if it is among two forces or more.”

Awa said the lack of a clear timeline for presidential elections adds mystery to the situation.

In an interview on the privately owned channel ONTV, presidential hopeful Amr Moussa also attacked the idea of a consensus candidate.

Moussa said political forces’ attempts to agree on a candidate might influence voters who want to vote for someone else.

“We shouldn’t deprive people from selection. Attempts to impose a specific candidate are unacceptable,” he added.

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