Breaking News Alert
The New York Times
Tuesday, November 22, 2011 -- 12:11
PM EST
-----
Battered by Protests, Egypt’s Military Promises to Speed
Transition to Civilian Rule
The ruling military council in Egypt agreed
on Tuesday to name a new civilian cabinet, led by a “technocrat” prime minister
rather than a politician, and to speed up the transition to civilian rule, with
a new constitution and a presidential election no later than June 2012, rather
than on an open-ended timetable stretching into 2013 or later.
The
agreement came after the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces met with
representatives of the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist groups in a session
that was boycotted by most other political parties. Under the agreement, the
first round of elections for a national assembly is to go ahead as scheduled on
Monday, a major goal of the brotherhood, which stands to win a large share of
the seats.
The deal may prove popular among the public, where concern for
a return to stability runs high. But it is unlikely to satisfy the huge crowds
of protestors who have gathered in Tahrir Square for days, demanding that the
military council immediately surrender more of its power to a new civilian
government. It leaves the civilian government reporting to the military —
effectively a continuation of what amounts to martial law in civilian clothes —
until June.
Read
More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/23/world/middleeast/egypts-cabinet-offers-to-quit-as-activists-urge-wider-protests.html?emc=na
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.