The Muslim Brotherhood demanded Thursday that Egypt’s military rulers
cede control of the government, stepping closer to a long-anticipated
confrontation between the ruling generals and the Islamist-dominated
Parliament. In a statement on its Web site and a television interview with one of
its senior leaders, the Brotherhood called for the military to allow the
replacement of the current prime minister and cabinet with a new
coalition government formed by Parliament, which would amount to an
immediate handover of power.
The Brotherhood, the formerly outlawed Islamist group that now
dominates Parliament, had previously said it was content to wait for the
June deadline by which the generals had pledged to turn over power,
which they seized with the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak last year.
And signs were accumulating of a general accord between the military and
the Brotherhood over the terms of a new constitution expected to be
ratified before the handover. The Brotherhood’s shift comes on the eve
of the Feb. 11 anniversary of Mr. Mubarak’s downfall, when other
activists around the country have called for a general strike to demand
the end of military rule — a call the Brotherhood has previously
resisted.
But the group is also changing its position at a time when the
military-controlled government appears overwhelmed by domestic and
foreign crises, including a deadly soccer riot last week followed by
five days of violent protests, a standoff with Washington that has
imperiled billions of dollars in United States aid and international
loans, and an economy teetering on collapse.
“We must start the formation of a coalition government immediately, to
deal in particular with the economic situation and the state of
lawlessness in this homeland,” Khairat el Shater, deputy to the
Brotherhood’s Supreme Guide and one of its most influential figures,
said in the online statement, which quoted an interview he gave to Al
Jazeera.
Mr. Shater pointed in particular to the government’s repeated use of
deadly force against civilian protesters.
“Dealing with the demonstrators violently is a mistake, a sign of
weakness and mismanagement by the Ministry of Interior,” he said.
The Brotherhood is effectively agreeing with street protesters and
liberals on the need for the military to leave power at once. But in the
polarized dynamics of Egypt’s nascent democracy, liberal party leaders
said Thursday that they were unwilling to form a coalition with the
Islamists even to remove the military.
“The liberals would prefer to be in opposition to monitor and leave it
to the Brotherhood to implement their control,” said Emad Gad, a leader
of the liberal Social Democratic Party.
At stake in the debate over the timing of the handover is who will hold
power during the drafting of a constitution and election of a
president. The military has previously sought guidelines giving itself
permanent political powers and immunities, and its opponents fear that
it could again try to shape the constitutional process for its own
benefit.
In the early rounds of elections, Brotherhood leaders briefly
threatened to challenge the generals over control of the government. But
later, signs of accord emerged with the ruling military on delicate
subjects like limiting disclosure of the defense budget.
Now, though, the military-led government appears paralyzed by crises.
The generals have seemed unwilling or unable to resolve a dispute with
Washington over criminal charges filed against 16 Americans, including
the son of a cabinet official, in a politically charged case over
foreign financing of nonprofit groups. (Egypt initially said that 19
Americans were being charged, but the United States says only 16 are
citizens; of those, at least six are still in Egypt and barred from
traveling.)
The dispute prompted President Obama and Congressional leaders to
threaten to cancel Egypt’s $1.5 billion in annual American aid.
Diplomats say American opposition could also make it harder for Egypt to
obtain billions of dollars in badly needed foreign currency from the
International Monetary Fund, as well as other international lenders and
donors.
Last week, the deadliest soccer riot in Egypt’s history and the
bloodiest in the world in at least 15 years left more than 73 fans dead.
Many blamed the police for failing to prevent the violence, and tens of
thousands of protesters swarmed Interior Ministry buildings in Cairo
and Suez.
But 15 more were killed as a result of the response by the police, who
used tear gas, birdshot, rubber bullets and live ammunition. Since
beginning a crackdown in October, the security forces have killed more
than 100 street protesters.
The soccer riot and its aftermath prove “that security in the country
is in a state of grave instability,” a Brotherhood spokesman, Mahmoud
Ghuzlan, said.
But the advent of a democratically elected Parliament has made it
possible for the chamber to form a coalition government with the
legitimacy to crack down on the disorder. “If the Parliament formed a
government that represents the people, it could take harsh measures that
would deter anyone who might dare to repeat such disasters,” Mr.
Ghuzlan said.
He said the Brotherhood had changed its position toward the interim
government in part because of the report of a parliamentary fact-finding
mission. Lawmakers who visited the morgue found that the interior
minister had lied to lawmakers when he said his officers never used
birdshot or other ammunition against the demonstrators.
“He didn’t say the truth,” Mr. Ghuzlan said, explaining that the Muslim
Brotherhood’s parliamentary leaders were now moving toward a
no-confidence vote to remove the interior minister. It could be a first
test of strength between the elected Parliament and military leaders.
But he said the group did not seek a confrontation, and noted that the
current interim Constitution backed by the military allowed it to name a
new cabinet even after a parliamentary vote of no confidence.
If the military council refuses to let Parliament name a new cabinet,
Brotherhood leaders said, they may seek a no-confidence vote on the
whole government, or take to the streets.
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