Wednesday, February 09, 2011
By Sara Hussein Agence France Presse
CAIRO: Protesters in Egypt have battled police and pro-regime activists in a bid to oust their long-time ruler and replace him in free elections, but they may have another hurdle to overcome: the constitution. In two weeks of demonstrations, protesters have made it clear their first demand is the immediate resignation of President Hosni Mubarak.
He has attempted to placate them by appointing his first-ever vice president, pledging not to stand for re- election in September and offering to ease the conditions for presidential candidacy.
Protesters have held firm in their demand for his departure, but some activists and experts warn that the language of the constitution means his immediate exit could actually hamstring Egypt’s democratic transition.
“The document has been booby-trapped,” Middle East expert Nathan Brown wrote in Foreign Policy, pointing out the power to change it lies exclusively with Mubarak. “Today’s problem is how to force the regime to negotiate the terms of transition in good faith.
If Mubarak leaves office, the constitution requires presidential elections within 60 days, but its candidacy limits would virtually guarantee the top job to a member of his ruling National Democratic Party. “It would be a disaster to have presidential elections under the current constitution,” said Hossam Bahgat, executive director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights.
Amendments made by Mubarak impose “impossible conditions” on would-be candidates, intended to ensure “that he or his son or his chosen candidate can win, and that no other credible candidate is able to,” he said. Bahgat and others argue that a middle road must be charted, keeping Mubarak on temporarily so he can initiate constitutional reform and delegate power.
“We would love of course to start over on a clean slate, but the problem is now, as change advocates, we need the constitution much more than Mubarak and his regime do,” he said.
Other reformers agree. One group that includes prominent businessman Naguib Sawiris, analyst Amr Hamzawy and journalist Salama Ahmed Salama outlined their reform proposal in the independent Al-Shorouk newspaper. And an Egyptian rights group has even drawn up a 15-day timetable under which constitutional amendments could be drafted and voted upon.
The suggestions contain the same key points. They want Mubarak to first delegate power to several vice presidents, effectively stripping his office of authority to do anything but amend the constitution and lift Egypt’s emergency law.
The president would then offer amendments to some of the constitution’s most controversial articles, including article 76 which governs candidacy and article 77 which removed term limits on the presidency. In line with the constitution, the amendments would then be adopted by Egypt’s legislature, in its final act before being dissolved.
Finally, the amendments would be put to a referendum, and new elections for the president and Parliament would be organized after they were adopted.
The process could provide “a way out of the grave crisis that has plagued the country and its citizens,” the group writing in Al-Shorouk said.
For some demonstrators the proposals miss the point, giving Mubarak a way to leave his stamp on Egypt’s future and cling to office a little longer.
Bahgat acknowledges this. But he defends them as essential. “What we have achieved so far is tremendous,” he said. “But at some point we have to get from the demonstrations into a transition to democracy.”
|