FRI 26 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Mar 22, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Some fear Egypt's constitutional changes will benefit Brotherhood

Tuesday, March 22, 2011
By Jailan Zayan
Agence France Presse

 

CAIRO: Egypt’s first exercise in democracy in decades was hailed as a success Monday, but the result of a key referendum has raised fears in some quarters that Islamists will hijack looming elections.


Egyptians Saturday voted 77 percent in favor of proposed constitutional amendments intended to guide the Arab world’s most populous nation through new presidential and parliamentary elections within six months.


The Muslim Brotherhood threw its huge influence and grassroots organization behind a “yes” vote, although youth groups that spearheaded the protests which forced Hosni Mubarak to resign as president last month had called for a “no” vote.


They argued the timetable set by the military was too tight for them to organize at grassroots level.
In an editorial, the mass-circulation daily Al-Ahram said the referendum was a “win for democracy,” a view echoed by the state-owned Al-Gomhuria which said: “Everybody has won in this referendum, whether they voted yes or no.”


The Coalition of the Revolution’s Youth urged supporters not to feel defeated after the result, and called on everyone to respect the result of the “historic democratic process” and quickly begin work on the next phase.
“We are now on the doorstep of a new era, in which Egyptians will shape their state for decades to come … we must work to carry on fulfilling the ambitions of the revolution,” the group said on its Facebook page.
But others felt more threatened by the result.

 

“The referendum, while it was free of fraud, was not free of ‘influence,’ especially by the Muslim Brotherhood and the religious trend in general,” wrote Suleiman Gouda in the independent daily Al-Masry al-Youm.
“The mosques were used by these groups to influence the voters,” he said.
The Muslim Brotherhood, the largest opposition movement in the country and officially banned in the Mubarak era, used its new found freedom to campaign for a “yes” vote.


The group, and other more fundamentalist religious movements, presented the “yes” vote as a religious duty, though many at polling stations said they voted “yes” for the sake of “stability” rather than religious inclinations.
In the run-up to the vote, “the ‘yes’ camp had been warning people of suffering on the day of judgment if they don’t vote yes,” wrote columnist Salama Ahmed Salama in the independent daily Al-Shoruk.


Gouda urged the army to oversee the country’s handover to a secular figure.
“The country must be handed over to an elected secular president, not to the Brotherhood, not because we are against them as a movement, but because the current exceptional circumstances work in their favor and not the others,” he wrote.


More than 14 million Egyptians approved the constitutional amendments and four million said “no,” organizing commission chairman Mohammad Attiya said.
A total of 41 percent or 18.5 million of the estimated 45 million eligible voters turned out Saturday to seize their first taste of democracy.



 
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