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CAIRO (Reuters) - A panel of legal experts started work on Sunday to revise Egypt's Islamist-tinged constitution, a vital first step on the road to fresh elections ordered by the army following its removal of Mohamed Mursi as president.
Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood, which has accused the army of orchestrating a military coup and denounced plans to revise the constitution, staged fresh rallies on Sunday to maintain pressure on the new, interim government.
Setting a highly ambitious timeframe, the military wants new elections in around six months and has tasked a panel of 10 legal experts to present proposed changes to the constitution within 30 days for review before a broader-based body.
"The problem is not amending or drafting the constitution, the problem is deciding the direction the country is headed," said Zaid Al-Ali of International IDEA, a Stockholm-based intergovernmental organization.
"Unless political agreement is reached between all of the major political actors in the country, we are going to head from one crisis to another," he said.
CAIRO -- Egyptian women worry that the new Islamist constitution will allow judges to enforce abusive practices against women, even approving marriages of girls as young as 9, and some are organizing to protect their rights. "The constitutional process was flawed from the start since the committee overseeing it was mostly comprised of men who view women's role as either sex objects or servants," says Nehad Abul Komsan, director of the Egyptian Center for Women's Rights. The constitution, drafted by members of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, which won a majority of seats in parliamentary elections, was approved by voters last month in a national vote.
CAIRO — Egypt's interim leader swore in a Cabinet on Tuesday that included women and Christians but no Islamists as the military-backed administration moved swiftly to formalize the new political order and present a more liberal face that is markedly at odds with the deposed president and his supporters.
Originally posted by RalagaNarHallas
www.usatoday.com... few extra links for ya op
CAIRO -- Egyptian women worry that the new Islamist constitution will allow judges to enforce abusive practices against women, even approving marriages of girls as young as 9, and some are organizing to protect their rights. "The constitutional process was flawed from the start since the committee overseeing it was mostly comprised of men who view women's role as either sex objects or servants," says Nehad Abul Komsan, director of the Egyptian Center for Women's Rights. The constitution, drafted by members of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, which won a majority of seats in parliamentary elections, was approved by voters last month in a national vote.
www.huffingtonpost.com... new cabinet seems to contain chiristians and women so at least that is a semi good sign on the matter
CAIRO — Egypt's interim leader swore in a Cabinet on Tuesday that included women and Christians but no Islamists as the military-backed administration moved swiftly to formalize the new political order and present a more liberal face that is markedly at odds with the deposed president and his supporters.
www.newser.com...
world.time.com... times take on the matter
CAIRO) — Egypt’s interim leader swore in a Cabinet on Tuesday that included women and Christians but no Islamists as the military-backed administration moved swiftly to formalize the new political order and present a more liberal face that is markedly at odds with the deposed president and his supporters.
The changes came at a time of deep polarization and violence in Egypt, including new clashes that killed seven people as part of the continuing bloodshed that has marked the days following the armed forces coup that swept President Mohammed Morsi from office and cracked down on the Muslim Brotherhood.
Read more: world.time.com...
Originally posted by rickymouse
If they want a fair constitution, why are they letting legal experts write it up? They are the kind of people who wrote the last crap up.
After a vigorous public campaign by the opposition to reject the constitution, it was approved by the public by almost two to one. The next constitutional step would have been parliamentary elections within sixty days.
Originally posted by RalagaNarHallas
reply to post by frazzle
wait the public gets a say in this thats amazing and good for egypt then this could be a very good sign
Originally posted by rickymouse
reply to post by frazzle
The language is probably so complicated that the people do not know what it really says. There are always loopholes left in Legal documents, some that are good, and some that are bad for people.
Originally posted by rickymouse
reply to post by frazzle
I'm interested to find out how it turns out too. Our original constitution was pretty simple but the system has got very complex, maybe a little too complex. People constantly try to bend the law to fit their desires.