Egypt's Morsi to appoint a woman and a Christian as his two Vice Presidents
17 replies, posted
[url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jun/26/mohamed-morsi-christian-woman-egypt[/url]
[quote=The Guardian]Mohamed Morsi's first appointments as president-elect of Egypt will be a woman and a Coptic Christian, his spokesman has told the Guardian, as he moves to allay fears of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Sameh el-Essawy said that although the names of the two choices had not been finalised, they would be Morsi's two vice-presidents.
When the appointments go through, they will constitute the first time in Egypt's history that either a woman or a Coptic Christian has occupied such an elevated position in the executive branch.
The Muslim Brotherhood is at pains to calm fears of what an Islamist president might mean for Egypt and the region at large. Appointing both a woman and a Coptic Christian is an attempt at a show of unity, and a rule by consensus.
Meanwhile, defeated presidential candidate Ahmed Shafik – Mubarak's last prime minister and Morsi's rival in the runoff election – flew to Abu Dhabi on Tuesday morning with his two daughters. His camp denied that he had fled as investigations begin into allegations of corruption against him while minister of civil aviation. He was in Abu Dhabi for "tourism" purposes, they said.
Essawy also said that Morsi had no objection to swearing the presidential oath in front of the supreme constitutional court (SCC), widely seen as a controversial move after the dissolution of the Muslim Brotherhood-majority parliament by that very court a day before the run-off elections earlier this month. But, "that does not mean he [Morsi] acknowledges the dissolution of parliament", said Essawy, a member of Morsi's former party, Freedom and Justice (FJP).
Morsi's decisions come on a day that saw a flurry of court decisions and delays regarding several contentious issues, including the status of parliament.
The Muslim Brotherhood's FJP has a 45% majority in the dissolved parliament and is furiously contesting the SCC decision, taking the matter to the supreme administrative court. On Tuesday that court delayed its ruling on the dissolution of parliament until 7 July.
The court also delayed another decision, filed by the former presidential candidate Khaled Ali, against the recent constitutional declaration issued by Scaf, the ruling military junta, which limits presidential authority on a number of matters regarding national security. The court delayed its ruling on this case until 10 July.
The constitutional declaration had stated that in the absence of parliament, the president would swear the oath in front of the SCC. The vice-president of the SCC, Tahani el-Gibali, told the Guardian that the constitutional declaration was "the highest law in the land", though the court "had not yet been notified of any confirmation that this would take place".
An important ruling was handed down on Tuesday when an administrative court overturned a ministry of justice decree two weeks ago that allowed military authorities to arrest and detain civilians. Human rights groups had been furious about the decree, calling it a gross transgression of authority, and immediately filed a complaint to the Cairo administrative court.
To add to the legal frenzy, the administrative court delayed a ruling regarding the constitutionality of the constituent assembly – tasked with drafting Egypt's future and permanent constitution – to 1 September. This case rests on the fact that the assembly was elected by parliament, which is now dissolved, therefore the assembly could have the same fate.
Morsi filled his second day as president-elect with meeting a number of state officials, including the current interior minister, in an attempt to build bridges with a police force that was the initial spark of the 25 January 2011 revolt leading to the fall of Hosni Mubarak. Morsi also met the sheikh of al-Azhar, Egypt's highest religious institution.
The president-elect continues to deliberate with the military and other political forces over the formation of his cabinet, which is expected to be led by an independent national figure and would not have an FJP majority.
In a populist move, Morsi's camp has announced that 750,000 government employees hired on temporary contracts – their status remaining that way for years – would be handed permanent contracts from the beginning of July. This has been a long-standing complaint of government workers, including ambulance service staff who have been intermittently protesting over the past year.
One of Morsi's first directives was to ban the tradition of hanging presidential portraits in all government buildings.[/quote]
Can't fault an egalitarian decision, really.
Political news surprising me in a positive way?
That's a so rare feeling.
And people were worried his election would turn Egypt into the next Iran.
two vice presidents?
iunno if that's how vice-presidency means.
couldn't you just, like, appoint fifty people of varying backgrounds?
cool
[QUOTE=Lankist;36502208]two vice presidents?
iunno if that's how vice-presidency means.
couldn't you just, like, appoint fifty people of varying backgrounds?[/QUOTE]
It seemed odd to me too but apparently a few countries do have two or even more VPs
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_Vice_Presidents[/url]
The [url=http://www.cabinet.gov.eg/AboutEgypt/ConstitutionalDeclaration_e.pdf]Egyptian constitution[/url] simply says there must be "at least one"
Keep in mind the current constitution is provisional and meant to be replaced by a permanent one written by the constituent assembly, so that could change
[QUOTE=Lankist;36502208]two vice presidents?
iunno if that's how vice-presidency means.
couldn't you just, like, appoint fifty people of varying backgrounds?[/QUOTE]
I think it would be a lot easier to listen to two people than 50.
[QUOTE=Mingebox;36504927]I think it would be a lot easier to listen to two people than 50.[/QUOTE]
whether or not he listens to any of them is yet to be determined.
And then everything turned out better than expected. Pleasepleasepleasepleasepleaseplease!
Well this is good news.
I'd been vaguely following the Egyptian elections, and it looked to me like they had no good choices - either an Islamic fundamentalist, or the guy who worked for the guy they just revolted against.
This, however, is a good sign. Everything may not work out perfectly, but this is definitely a good sign.
Perhaps the "Muslim Brotherhood" is more like the various European "Christian Democratic" parties than a fundamentalist party...
Glad to see the Government workers getting the change from temporary contracts to permanent. If Egypt has systems even remotely like Canada, that is a big deal.
-snip
This, Is a step in the right direction. Something so rare in politics now
Wow, now that's pretty awesome.
i couldnt care if it were a liberal gay transexual woman or hitler himself, judge by their actions not by appearance
now he just needs a jew prime minister and he's created the perfect circle of trust.
That's cool but this is supposing he's actually counting on letting the two doing something, and that he's not appointing them just to give some egalitarian window-dressing and give them jackshit authority.
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