Egypt's protests |
After the wave of violent clashes happened in Egypt nationwide since the
commemorating of January 25 Revolution’s anniversary and the following events
Egypt’s Shura Council which has the legislative authorities discusses the new
laws aimed to control the street protests and demonstrations.
The talks about the possibility of the amendments in the current protests’
law have been circulating in Egypt during last time, so meanwhile the Islamist
dominated Shura Council is ready to impose some changes to the current law.
The new laws are aimed to stipulate the rights of Egyptians to protest
and to organize demonstrations, and at the same time the laws will also
stipulate the forms of controlling of the protests and the ways of dealing with
them including the responses of the Central Security Forces in different
situations.
Generally the new laws sparked the wave of criticism and are considered
being oppressive and against Egyptian citizens as they give the police and
Ministry of Interior excessive powers in dealing with the protests and their
participants.
I’d like to share here Ahram Online article highlighting the most
important issues of the new currently discussed laws regarding the controlling
of the protests.
The article is originally posted here.
Shura Council to discuss laws aimed at controlling street protests and
confronting thuggery
The government is set to give the police sweeping powers to disrupt
protests and combat 'saboteurs and provocateurs'
Gamal Essam El-Din , Sunday 3 Feb 2013
The government of Prime Minister Hisham Kandil is currently in the
process of drafting two new laws aimed at regulating the right of street
protest and combating the proliferation of thuggery. According to Justice
Minister Ahmed Mekki, anti-protest laws have become a necessity to stem the
tide of violence in the street and to regulate the right of organising
demonstrations.
A draft anti-protest law is expected to be discussed by the
Islamist-dominated Shura Council's Committee on National Defence in the coming
days. Informed sources told Ahram Online that "if approved by the
committee this week, the law could be discussed by the council in a plenary
meeting next Sunday."
In its meeting held today, the Committee on National Defence launched
scathing attack against private TV satellite television channels, taking them
to task for alledgely inciting protesters to launch violent attacks on several
state buildings in recent days, notably Al-Ittihadiya presidential palace in
Cairo's district of Heliopolis on 1 February. Deputy Interior Minister Major
General Abdel-Fattah Othman complained that "police forces have not been
able to fight violent street protests in recent days because there is no law
that gives us the authority to do this.
The government's new draft law would grant police forces a free hand to
use force to disrupt and disperse streets protests, especially in the vicinity
of Al-Ittihadiya Palace and other significant state institutions, such as
police stations, parliament, and state ministries. The 26-article law also
makes it obligatory that the interior ministry be notified of any given protest
or demonstration's date, objective and site. The notification request must be
submitted to the ministry five days in advance of the date of the demonstration.
The interior ministry reserves the right to forbid "demonstrations"
or "public gatherings and meetings" if they risk "disrupting
public peace and security."
The draft law also stipulates that demonstrations or street protests be
organised between 7am to 7pm, and public gatherings from 7am to 11pm. The law
gives police forces rights to disrupt demonstrations or public gatherings by
use of force if they are found to threaten public order.
Additionally, the draft law prohibits protesters and demonstrators from
chanting slogans that "might sow the seeds of sedition," or wearing
black face coverings. Prosecutor-General Talaat Abdallah recently ordered
police forces to arrest citizens who wear black face masks or coverings or who
belong to new revolutionary groups known as "Black Bloc." The law
threatens violators with one year in prison and a fine of no less than LE30,000
(around $4,000) and no more than LE100,000 (around $14,000).
Ihab El-Kharat, chairman of Shura Council's Human Rights Committee, told
Ahram Online that "The government tried last month to send the
anti-protest law to the Shura Council to discuss it but our response was that
this is not the right time to discuss this law."
"I, like any ordinary citizen, knew about this anti-protest law
from information in the media and I think that this is a new repressive measure
aimed at pouring oil on fire rather than finding a political solution to the
current crisis in Egypt," said El-Kharat, an appointed Coptic MP who
belongs to the Egyptian Social Democratic Party. El-Kharat warned: "It is
quite a dangerous development that the Shura Council becomes a tool for
Islamists imposing repressive laws on Egyptians." "These are the same
authoritarian techniques of the former regime of Hosni Mubarak," said
Al-Kharat.
Unlike El-Kharat, Islamist MPs, who mostly belong to the Muslim
Brotherhood and the ultraconservative Salafist El-Nour Party, are exerting
pressure on the government to send the anti-protest law to the Shura Council as
soon as possible. Sobhi Saleh, a leading firebrand of the Muslim Brotherhood's
Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), told parliamentary correspondents today that
the Shura Council — currently endowed with legislative powers until a new House
of Representatives (formerly People's Assembly) is elected — has sent messages
to the government twice, urging it to refer the new anti-protest law to the
Shura Council as soon as possible. "We expect this law to be sent to the
Shura Council to be discussed at once," said Saleh.
Saleh revealed that the government has also finalised drafting a new law
aimed at fighting thuggery and hooliganism. Saleh said the law will toughen
penalties for acts of thuggery. "This law gives police forces the right to
arrest criminals who join street protests or stand near clashes with police,
even if they refrain from committing any violent acts." According to
Saleh, "at the moment there is a pressing need to impose an iron fist on
armed thugs and stand up to saboteurs and provocateurs."
Responding to a question about the negative
impact of repressive laws on the Muslim Brotherhood and Islamist President
Mohamed Morsi, Saleh insisted that "the popularity of Islamist President
Mohamed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood have skyrocketed in recent days."
"We were not defeated as the opposition claims, and President Morsi will
continue fighting violence and corruption," he added.
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