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Saturday, May 25 2013
Farewell To Newt
IT's not easy letting him go. Not easy at all. Sort of like swearing off bedtime Ben & Jerry's: there's valour and the promise of self-improvement in the sacrifice, but also the sad awareness that the world just got a little less naughty. A little less fun. No matter. It's time ...
STEP TO THE CENTRE
ONMay 23-24, 1865, the victorious Union armies marched through Washington. The columns of troops stretched back 25 miles. They marched as a single mass, clad in blue, their bayonets pointing skyward. As Wilfred McClay wrote in his book, ‘The ...
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Al Azhar withdraws from Egypt’s constitution panel

AFP

CAIRO AL AZHAR, Sunni Islam’s highest authority, said on Thursday it was withdrawing from a disputed panel dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood to draft a new constitution, following the example of liberals.

Al Azhar said in a statement that it was underrepresented in the constituent assembly which the Islamist-majority parliament appointed to draft the new charter.

“Al Azhar announces that it will not participate in the panel,” it said in a statement, because it was “not appropriately represented.” The Coptic Christian Church, which has only a handful of representatives in the panel, is also considering pulling out, according to press reports. The constitution is to replace the one suspended by the military when it took power following president Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow last year in a popular uprising.

Members of the panel elected the Islamist speaker of parliament Saad al- Katatni as its head on Wednesday, intensifying a standoff with secularists over the nature of the charter.

Katatni belongs to the Muslim Brotherhood’s political arm, the Freedom and Justice Party, which dominated parliamentary elections after Mubarak’s ouster.

His appointment came after liberal, leftist and independent parties and figures angrily withdrew from the committee, accusing Islamists of monopolising the process.

Only 74 of the 100-member panel attended the first session on Wednesday, Egypt’s official MENA news agency reported.

The constituent assembly’s legitimacy was further called into question after Egypt’s Supreme Constitutional Court announced it was withdrawing its representative from the panel earlier on Wednesday.

The crisis comes at a critical time in Egypt’s transition, with the first presidential elections since Mubarak’s fall less than two months away.

The revolt paved the way for the formation of dozens of political groups and movements of all political stripes, but it is the Islamists — the most organised and with a wide network of supporters — who have gained the most.

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