Morsi may have overreached in his decree giving himself dictatorial powers. And in doing so, he may have squandered his chance to impose Sharia upon Egypt.
“Egyptian protesters penetrate barrier at Morsi’s palace,” from Reuters, December 7:
CAIRO – Tens of thousands of Egyptian protesters surged around President Mohamed Morsi’s palace in Cairo on Friday after breaking through barbed wire barricades and climbing onto army tanks guarding the premises.
“The people want the downfall of the regime” and “Leave, leave,” they chanted, using slogans used in the uprising that toppled Morsi’s predecessor Hosni Mubarak in February 2011.
Opposition leaders earlier rejected a national dialogue proposed by the Islamist president as a way out of a crisis that has polarized the nation and provoked deadly street clashes.
Elite Republican Guard units had ringed the palace with tanks and barbed wire on Thursday after a night of violence between Islamist supporters of Morsi and their opponents, in which seven people were killed and 350 wounded.
Islamists, who had obeyed a military order for demonstrators to leave the palace environs, held funerals on Friday at Cairo’s al-Azhar mosque for six Morsi partisans who were among the dead. “With our blood and souls, we sacrifice to Islam,” they chanted.
Morsi had offered few concessions in a speech late on Thursday, refusing to retract a November 22 decree in which he assumed sweeping powers or cancel a referendum next week on a constitution newly drafted by an Islamist-dominated assembly.
Instead, he called for a dialogue at his office on Saturday to chart a way forward for Egypt after the referendum, an idea that liberal, leftist and other opposition leaders rebuffed.
They have demanded that Morsi rescind the decree in which he temporarily shielded his decisions from judicial review and that he postpone the Dec. 15 referendum before any talks begin….
Morsi’s decree giving himself extra powers sparked the worst political crisis since he took office in June and set off renewed unrest that is dimming Egypt’s hopes of stability and economic recovery after nearly two years of turmoil following the overthrow of Mubarak, a military-backed strongman.
The turmoil has exposed contrasting visions for Egypt, one held by Islamists, who were suppressed for decades by the army, and another by their rivals, who fear religious conservatives want to squeeze out other voices and restrict social freedoms….
Here again, Reuters uses “conservatives” of pro-Sharia forces, while simultaneously also calling opponents of Sharia “conservatives.”
US President Barack Obama told Morsi on Thursday of his “deep concern” about casualties in this week’s clashes and said “dialogue should occur without preconditions”..
The upheaval in the most populous Arab nation worries the United States, which has given billions of dollars in military and other aid since Egypt made peace with Israel in 1979.
Said, the leader of the Free Egyptians Party, accused Morsi of ignoring all the opposition’s demands in his “shocking” speech on Thursday and of fixing the dialogue agenda in advance.
Ayman Mohamed, 29, a protester at the palace, said Morsi should scrap the draft constitution and heed popular demands.
“He is the president of the republic. He can’t just work for the Muslim Brotherhood,” Mohamed said of the eight-decade-old Islamist movement that propelled Morsi from obscurity to power….