Monday, July 1, 2013

Army delivers ultimatum to end Egypt crisis


-
Cairo - The Egyptian army has asked President Mohamed Morsi to resolve huge protests against his rule or face intervention within 48 hours, placing huge pressure on country's first democratically elected leader.

In a statement on Monday, the army called on all groups – opposition and pro-Morsi alike – to resolve the situation. "The army gives an ultimatum of 48 hours as a last ditch chance, as the homeland and the nation cannot tolerate any party failing to live up to its responsibilities," the statement said.

"The national security of the state is in severe danger", it said, adding that if there was no resolution, "We are compelled by our national responsibility... to issue a road map for the future and certain measures... for the participation of all [political] factions."
It described the mass protests on Sunday that brought out millions of Egyptians demanding President Morsi's resignation as "glorious".
It said protesters expressed their opinion "in peaceful and civilised manner", and that "it is necessary that the people get a reply ... to their calls".
'Huge pressure'
Al Jazeera's chief political analyst Marwan Bishara said the statement undermined the authority of Morsi.
"For the army to give the president 48 hours warning, the army are saying who is the boss," he said. "Morsi is no longer the same president as this morning in the eyes of those on the streets."
He said the statement placed "huge pressure" on the president to resolve the protests, "otherwise we can expect army intervention".

"That could be taking over the streets or taking over the government. This message is to the president. This undercuts his authority."
Tamarod, the main opposition group that has organised the protests, said the army tatement showed it was taking the people's side. It urged its supporters to stay on the streets and squares of Egypt until Morsi's rule was ended.
Meanwhile, supporters of Morsi called for a "million man" protest to be held at Cairo university square.
The statment came hours after five of Morsi's ministers resigned. They were the tourism minister, Hisham Zaazou; communication and IT minister Atef Helmi; the minister for legal and parliamentary affairs, Hatem Bagato; water minister Abdel Qawy Khalifa; and environment minister Khaled Abdel-Aal.
They handed in their letters of resignation together to Prime Minister Hisham Qandil, the official said.
Tourism minister Zazou tried to resign last month after Morsi appointed Adel al-Khayat, a member of an Islamist party linked to a massacre of tourists in Luxor, as governor of the temple city. Khayat later quit.
The resignations came during a second day of huge demonstrations against Morsi, who completed one year in office on Sunday.
Brotherhood HQ burned
In the capital, Cairo, the official building of the powerful Muslim Brotherhood to which Morsi belongs, was set ablaze before people stormed and looted the building. The interior ministry said that eight people had been killed in the violence.
People were seen leaving with petrol bombs, helmets, flak jackets, furniture, televisions and documents.
Mohamed ElBeltagy, of the Brotherhood, told AlJazeera that he rejected a claim that his members opened fire from inside the headquarters at attackers.
Many anti-Morsi protesters spent the night in dozens of tents pitched at Cairo's central Tahrir Square and the palace, positions organisers say they will hold until Morsi resigns.
In fewer numbers, supporters of the Egyptian president came out on Sunday to show their support and defend the legitimacy of the president.
In total, 16 people have been killed and hundreds wounded in clashes between pro- and anti-Morsi groups.
Tamarod - Arabic for rebellion - gave Morsi a deadline of Tuesday to quit, threatening a campaign of civil disobedience if he stays.
The number of people who joined in protests on Sunday was between 14m and 17m people, the interior ministry told Al Jazeera.
 http://www.aljazeera.com
1/7/13 
--
-
Related:
 

6 comments:

  1. Egypt's Nour Party fears army return to politics ...

    CAIRO - Egypt's second biggest Islamist party said on Monday it feared the army's return to public life "in a big way" after the military gave politicians 48 hours to resolve the country's political crisis.

    The Nour Party believed Egypt's national security was threatened by the division between the ruling Islamists and their opponents, Khaled Alam Eddin told the website of the Al-Ahram newspaper. "But we have fears about a return of the army once again in the picture in a big way," he said.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Egypts-Nour-Party-fears-army-return-to-politics-318346
    1/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  2. Morsi meets Egypt army chief after ultimatum ...

    CAIRO - Islamist President Mohamed Morsi met the head of Egypt's armed forces along with the prime minister on Monday, according to a statement on the president's official Facebook page.

    The page was updated after General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi issued a virtual ultimatum to Morsi to reach a power-sharing agreement with his political rivals within 48 hours.

    The Facebook page showed a photograph of Morsi with Sisi and Prime Minister Hisham Kandil, sitting in easy chairs and smiling. It was not clear when it was taken.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Morsi-meets-Egypt-army-chief-after-ultimatum-318349
    1/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  3. Muslim Brotherhood calls for mass rallies after army ultimatum...

    The Muslim Brotherhood is mobilizing supporters nationwide in a show of support for embattled President Mohammad Morsi, few hours after the army issued a 48-hour ultimatum

    CAIRO (AA)
    – The Muslim Brotherhood is mobilizing supporters nationwide in a show of support for embattled President Mohammad Morsi, few hours after the army issued a 48-hour ultimatum to either solve the deepening political crisis or else it would announce its own roadmap for the future.

    Well-placed sources inside the Brotherhood said instructions have been issued to members in Cairo to assemble in Rabaa Al Adawi square in Nasr City.

    Thousands of Morsi’s supporters have been camping out in Rabaa Al Adawi to reject opposition demands for his resignation and early presidential elections.

    The sources argued that those campaigning in Rabaa Al Adawi represent only 30% of the group’s support base.

    They asserted that the Brotherhood has decided after the army statement to rally all its supporters to show their real numbers.

    The Muslim Brotherhood will not resort to violence under any circumstances, the sources stressed.

    Earlier today, the military issued a 48-hour ultimatum for all political rivals to find a solution to the political deadlock gripping the county before intervening.

    “We give all parties 48 hours to respond to the people’s demands,” the army said in a statement read out on state television.

    The military warned that if the parties concerned failed to achieve a breakthrough within 48 hours it will announce a roadmap and certain measures and it will supervise their implementation.

    Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians had taken to the streets on Sunday to press for early presidential election.
    http://www.aa.com.tr/en/rss/199385--muslim-brotherhood-calls-for-mass-rallies-after-army-ultimatum
    1/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  4. La présidence égyptienne rejette l'ultimatum de l'armée....

    La présidence égyptienne a rejeté implicitement dans la nuit du lundi 1er au mardi 2 juillet l'ultimatum lancé plus tôt par l'armée au chef de l'Etat islamiste Mohamed Morsi, lui laissant 48 heures pour satisfaire les "demandes du peuple", faute de quoi elle imposerait une feuille de route. Déterminée "à poursuivre dans la voie qu'elle a choisi pour mener une réconciliation nationale globale", l'administration note que "la déclaration des forces armées n'a pas été soumise au (chef de l'Etat)" avant sa diffusion et contient "des signes pouvant causer la confusion".

    "L'Etat démocratique égyptien civil est une des plus importantes réalisations de la révolution du 25 janvier" 2011 qui a renversé l'ancien président Hosni Moubarak, poursuit le communiqué, affirmant que "l'Egypte ne permettra absolument aucun retour en arrière quelles que soient les circonstances"......http://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2013/07/02/la-presidence-egyptienne-rejette-l-ultimatum-de-l-armee_3440080_3212.html#ens_id=1538049&xtor=RSS-3208
    2/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  5. Ο Αμερικανός επιτελάρχης στρατηγός Ντέμπσι, είχε επικοινωνία με τον Αιγύπτιο ομόλογό του ....

    Ο αμερικανός στρατηγός, Μάρτιν Ντέμπσι, είχε τη Δευτέρα τηλεφωνική επικοινωνία με τον αρχηγό του γενικού επιτελείου του στρατού της Αιγύπτου, δήλωσε αξιωματούχος των ΗΠΑ στο πρακτορείο Ρόιτερς, χωρίς να δώσει ωστόσο περαιτέρω λεπτομέρειες σχετικά με τα όσα συζητήθηκαν.

    Το τηλεφώνημα από τον Ντέμπσι πραγματοποιήθηκε την ίδια ημέρα που οι ένοπλες δυνάμεις της Αιγύπτου διεμήνυσαν προς την κυβέρνηση ότι έχει περιθώριο 48 ωρών προκειμένου να απαντήσει στα αιτήματα του λαού, προειδοποιώντας πως αν κάτι τέτοιο δεν συμβεί, ο στρατός θα επιβάλλει τον δικό του «οδικό χάρτη» για το μέλλον της χώρας, αναφέρει το Ρόιτερς.


    Ανταλλαγή πυροβολισμών

    Υποστηρικτές και αντίπαλοι του αιγυπτίου προέδρου, Μοχάμεντ Μόρσι, αντάλλαξαν πυροβολισμούς στην πόλη του Σουέζ, δήλωσαν αυτόπτες μάρτυρες τη Δευτέρα στο πρακτορείο Ρόιτερς.

    Τουλάχιστον 16 άνθρωποι έχασαν τη ζωή τους την Κυριακή κατά τη διάρκεια διαδηλώσεων, όταν εκατομμύρια Αιγύπτιοι πλημμύρισαν τους δρόμους της χώρας, απαιτώντας από τον Μόρσι την παραίτησή του.

    «Ο ήχος των πυροβολισμών είναι παντού», δήλωσε αυτόπτης μάρτυρας στο Ρόιτερς.
    http://www.e-typos.com/Post.aspx?id=36287
    2/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  6. Egypt's Foreign Minister Amr resigned amid anti-government protests....

    Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr resigned on Tuesday.

    News report of Egpyt's official news agency MENA announced that Minister of Foreign Affairs Amr resigned. It was alleged that recent protests in Egypt caused his resignation.

    With the resignation of Amr, the number of ministers leaving office since June 30 demonstrations rose to 5.

    On Monday, the ministers of environmental affairs, communications, tourism and legal and parliamentary affairs have tendered their resignations.

    Hundreds of thousands of protesters took to the streets on Sunday to call for Morsi’s resignation and snap presidential election.
    http://www.aa.com.tr/en/rss/199479--aa
    2/7/13

    ReplyDelete

Only News

Featured Post

US Democratic congresswoman : There is no difference between 'moderate' rebels and al-Qaeda or the ISIS

United States Congresswoman and Democratic Party member Tulsi Gabbard on Wednesday revealed that she held a meeting with Syrian Presiden...

Blog Widget by LinkWithin