Loading...

Egypt - Opposition Vows To Stop Referendum Vote

Egypt's opposition National Salvation Front has urged supporters to vote "No" in a looming referendum on a controversial draft constitution.
However, it said it could still call a boycott if its demands for the ballot - including the judiciary acting as overseer - were not met.

The opposition says the draft document, backed by President Mohammed Morsi and his supporters, is too Islamist.

The controversy has prompted mass demonstrations across Egypt.

In a separate development, conciliation talks called for Wednesday by the head of the armed forces have been postponed, with no new date announced.

The National Salvation Front on Wednesday spelled out its stance on the referendum, issuing a call to Egyptians to "go to polling stations to refuse the proposed constitution and to vote 'no'".

Leading opposition politician and former Arab League chief Amr Moussa told Reuters news agency: "We will vote 'no'."

But another leading opposition figure, Hamdeen Sabbahi, told a news conference the Front would still call for a boycott if key conditions were not met.

"If these guarantees aren't in place by the day of the referendum on Saturday, we will withdraw from it," he said.

The conditions included:

judicial oversight of voting
monitoring by local and international non-governmental organisations
sufficient security presence
detailed results announced once counting is complete
voting on one day alone
Correspondents say it could prove impossible for all these conditions can be met, as thousands of judges have already refused to take part.

Voting has already begun in embassies and consulates abroad, but there is still much confusion over the domestic vote, particularly whether it will be held over the next two weekends or on 15 December alone as demanded by the opposition.

Further confusion arose when the military said a national unity meeting aimed at calming the crisis had been delayed "because reactions to it were not at the level wished for".

Only moments before the postponement, the opposition had made it known that it was prepared to take part.

Gen Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the defence minister and head of the armed forces, thanked those who had responded to the invitation but said the talks were being postponed to an unspecified later date.

As tensions surrounding the vote grew, thousands of protesters took to the streets of Cairo on Tuesday in rallies both for and against the proposed constitution.

The streets of Cairo were described as calm on Wednesday and army tanks remained deployed outside the presidential palace.

Last weekend, the president offered a concession to the opposition by annulling a 22 November decree that gave him sweeping new powers.

However, some rulings of the controversial decree - which stripped the judiciary of any right to challenge his decisions - still stand, and a number of opposition figures dismissed the concession as a political manoeuvre.

Egypt 2786498286071028556

Post a Comment

emo-but-icon

Home item

Popular Posts

Labels

Current News Nigeria Africa BREAKING NEWS Boko Haram Terrorism Entertainment Goodluck Jonathan South Africa Business Big Brother Africa Mali Egypt AFCON Elections Sudan Abubakar Shekau Zimbabwe Libya Somali FIFA Barack Obama Chelsea Al-Qaeda Syria Mandela Senegal African Union Lagos Manchester United Tunisia Uganda Patience Jonathan Central Africa Jose Mourinho Barcelona Jacob Zuma Stephen Keshi Algeria Dangote Ethiopia Malawi Nigerian Army Oscar Pistorius Zambia Big Brother CHASE Celebrity Saudi Arabia Ansaru Arsenal Mikel Obi Liberia Muslim Brotherhood Olusegun Obasanjo Pope Benedict XVI Okonjo-Iweala Amnesty Argentina Congo North Korea Queen Elizabeth II Robert Mugabe Sierra Leone Angola Buhari Dana Twitter APC Adenuga Alex Ferguson Aljazeera Boston Marathon David Mark EFCC Henry Okah Morsi Sanusi Togo #OccupyNigeria Arik Air Arsene Wenger Basketball Cristiano Ronaldo Current Views Spain UEFA Champions League Uhuru Kenyatta Yobe Babatunde Fashola COZA Drogba Michelle Obama Morgan Tsvangirai Tanzania Wole Soyinka Bakassi Peninsula Mark Zuckerberg Middle East Mozambique Neymar Roman Abrahamovich World Bank World Cup ANC Al Ahly Al Shabaab Aliko Dangote Angelina Jolie Bayelsa Big Brother Star Game Burkina Faso Chevron D'Banj Don Jazzy FELA Farouk Lawan Kim Kardashian Michael Jordan Mike Tyson Peter Odemwingie Sepp Blatter Singapore Social Media Sokoto Super Eagles Swaziland Tiger Woods WhatsApp Yahoo Asari Dokubo BBC British M16 CBN Danbaba Suntai David Beckham Ernest Koroma Fabrice Muamba Femi Falana Hezbollah Julius Malema Kabiru Sokoto Kanu Nwankwo Lesotho Michael Jackson Osama Bin Laden Pope John Paul II Sani Abacha Somaliland South Korea Susan Rice Taraba Yakowa Yemen Yvonne Ndege Zamfara Zaria

Random Posts

Flickr Photo