Egypt Tweaks Roadmap, Tension Escalates

Local Editor
Clashes erupted in Cairo Sunday between residents and police after a policeman shot dead a student following an argument, security officials said.
The student was shot dead by the policeman after the two had a heated argument when their vehicles crashed into each other in the capital's northern Amiriya neighborhood, they said.
Residents of the neighborhood later surrounded the police station and fighting broke out, security officials and state media reported, adding that gunshots were heard.
Meanwhile, the country's political transition was pitched into uncertainty when a draft constitution was amended to allow a presidential election to be held before parliamentary polls, indicating a potential change in the army's roadmap.
The roadmap unveiled when the military ousted President Mohamed Mursi in July said a parliamentary election should take place before the presidential one.
But the draft finalized on Sunday by the 50-member constituent assembly avoids saying which vote should happen first, leaving the decision up to President Adly Mansour, seen as a front for army rule since he was installed to head the interim administration.
The draft also says the "election procedures" must start within six months of the constitution's ratification, meaning Egypt may not have an elected president and parliament until the second half of next year.
A major milestone in Egypt's political roadmap, the constitution must be approved in a referendum expected this month or next. Amr Moussa, chairman of the constituent assembly, said the draft constitution would be handed to Mansour on Tuesday.
Moussa, former Arab League secretary general, was a candidate in the presidential election won by Mursi last year.
The new constitution could lead to an outright ban on Islamist parties and strengthens the political grip of the already powerful military establishment that has put itself squarely back at the heart of power since toppling Mursi.
The assembly finished voting on the draft after talks on the order of next year's elections stretched late into Sunday night.
The changes follow debate fuelled by concern that weak secular parties are not ready for parliamentary elections, sources familiar with the discussions have said.
Sisi led the July 3 overthrow of Mursi and is widely seen as the lead candidate for the presidency.
As they wait for Sisi to make his intentions clear, none of the candidates defeated by Mursi in last year's presidential election, such as Moussa, have declared they will run. However, Hamdeen Sabahi, a leftist who came third, has strongly hinted he would like to.
Mursi's Brotherhood won all elections after President Hosni Mubarak's downfall in 2011, drawing on its position as Egypt's best-organized party to defeat leftists and liberals in parliamentary and presidential polls.
But the state has cracked down hard on the Brotherhood since Mursi's ouster, arresting thousands of its supporters including many of its leaders. The group says it wants nothing to do with the army-planned transition.
The draft constitution widens the already broad privileges enjoyed by the army by requiring the approval of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces for the choice of a defense minister to serve for two full presidential terms from the moment the document is ratified.
It does not indicate how the minister of defense could be sacked or who has the authority to fire him.
It also allows the military to try civilians in military courts - a holdover from previous constitutions that is strongly opposed by democracy activists. The draft does, however, specify the crimes for which a civilian can be tried by the military.
The constitution will replace one signed into law by Mursi last year after it was passed in a referendum. The new text strips out Islamist-inspired additions introduced by the Islamist-dominated assembly that drafted it.
Mursi's fall set off the bloodiest bout of internal strife in Egypt's modern history.
Armed attacks on the security forces have become commonplace, and some 200 policemen and soldiers have been killed in what the government casts as a war on terrorism waged by militants. The Brotherhood says it is peacefully resisting the army takeover.
In a reminder of the simmering tension, security forces fired teargas in Cairo's Tahrir Square to disperse anti-government protesters. It appeared to be the biggest protest by Brotherhood supporters in Tahrir Square since Mursi's downfall.
Others flashed the four-finger hand sign denoting sympathy with the hundreds of Mursi supporters shot dead by the security forces when they broke up their Cairo sit-ins on August 14.
Army vehicles moved in to drive the demonstrators away and later sealed off the square completely. Some passersby shouted abuse at the protesters, others waved in support. Earlier, protesters set a police truck ablaze near Cairo University.
The government says it is determined to implement a law passed last week that heavily restricts protests. Criticized by the United States, the law has hardened fears of pro-democracy campaigners about the future of political freedoms in Egypt.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team