Egypt's Constituent Assembly |
The technical team to amend the Constitution and also the 50-members committee
for its further studying were formed according to the Constitutional
Declaration issued by Adly Mansour.
The first stage of amending the Constitution wrote by the Islamist
dominated Constituent Assembly in 2012 was connected to the work of the
technical committee which proposed the fundamental amendments to the suspended
2012 Constitution.
On the next stage the initial draft of the Constitution was sent to
Egypt’s Interim President Adly Mansour, and now the draft is ready to be
referred to the 50-member committee representing all the segments of Egyptian
society and all the political forces in the country. The draft of the
Constitution on this stage should be studied by the members of the committee and
either approved or be subjected to to the further amendments.
Adly Mansour, Egypt's Interim President |
According to the informed sources close to the technical team Egypt’s
President has already received the names proposed by different political,
economical, social, religious and other institutions to form the 50-member committee
to amend the 2012 Constitution. The lists received by the Presidency indicate
that the majority of the committee could be built by the secular forces, and
Islamist powers will be represented by Al-Azhar and several political parties
including Salafi Al-Nour Party. The representatives of Al-Nour Party in their
turn stated they are planning to participat in the process of amending the
Constitution in order to preserve Islamic identity of the Egyptian state.
Thus the majority of the representatives of the 50-member Constitutional
committee are expected to be the representatives of the secular forces, mostly
liberals and leftists.
I’d like to share here also Ahram Online article containing more details
on the issue. The article is written by Gamal Essam El-Deen and published here.
Secularists to dominate Egypt's final constitution-drafting process
Representatives of secular forces are expected to dominate the 50-member
committee entrusted with writing the final draft of Egypt's new constitution
Gamal Essam El-Din , Monday 26 Aug 2013
The first stage of Egypt's post-30 June political roadmap was completed
on Monday. A ten-member technical committee entrusted with amending the 2012
Islamist-backed constitution passed its draft to interim President Adly
Mansour.
The committee was formed in accordance with Article 28 of the
constitutional declaration issued by Mansour on 8 July, after Islamist
president Mohamed Morsi was ousted from office on 3 July.
The second stage is expected to begin within days, with President
Mansour issuing a decree forming a 50-member committee representing all
segments of society to write the final draft of Egypt's new constitution.
According to Article 29 of the 8 July declaration, the 50-member
committee must include representatives of political parties, intellectuals,
workers, farmers, unionists, and national councils.
It must also be composed of representatives of Al-Azhar, Egyptian
Churches, the armed forces, police, public figures and at least ten figures
representing youth and women.
Informed sources close to the ten-member technical committee revealed to
Ahram Online that: "The presidency has already received the names
nominated by political, religious, social and economic institutions to form the
50-member committee."
The lists show that secular forces are slated to gain a majority in the
50-member committee entrusted with completing the constitution before it is put
to a national referendum.
Islamists, who dominated the 100-member constituent assembly that drafted
Egypt's 2012 constitution, will be a minority.
The secularists will primarily belong to liberal and leftist (Nasserist
and nationalist) factions. Islamist representatives will be confined to two
forces: the ultraconservative Salafist Nour Party and Al-Azhar.
The initial list of the secularist representatives will include liberals
such as former foreign minister Amr Moussa, Journalists' Syndicate leader and
Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies director Diaa Rashwan, and
leftists such as Sameh Ashour, Lawyers' Syndicate chairman and chairman of the
Arab Nasserist Party.
The list will also include Mahmoud Badr and Mohamed Abdel-Aziz, liberals
representing the Tamarod movement which spearheaded the 30 June protests
against Morsi.
Egypt's Constitution |
Liberals are also expected to include high-profile constitutional law
professor Mohamed Nour Farahat, representing the Egyptian Social Democratic
Party.
At the top of the list of leftist members is Abdel-Ghaffar Shukr,
representing the Socialist Popular Current and Tagammu.
Informed sources told Ahram Online that the presidency stipulated that
lawyers', journalists', doctors' and engineers' syndicates should send one
representative each.
The Engineers' Syndicate is currently controlled by the Muslim
Brotherhood, from which Morsi hails, and it is unclear how its representative
will be chosen, given that the Islamic group has been opposing the ongoing
roadmap in continued protests against Morsi's overthrow.
As for religious institutions, sources indicated that Hassan Al-Shafie,
deputy to Al-Azhar's grand imam, is likely to represent Al-Azhar. Another
figure representing Al-Azhar is expected to join the committee.
Informed sources also indicated that figures representing Egypt's three
main Churches (Coptic, Anglican and Catholic) will be selected as members of
the committee. Anpa Pola, archbishop of the Nile Delta’s Tanta province, will
represent the Coptic Church, while priest Safwat El-Biyadi is expected to
represent the Anglican Church.
Major-General Mamdouh Shahin is expected to represent the armed forces,
although several political activists accuse him of collaborating with Islamists
while drafting the 2012 constitution.
The controversial Article 219
Nour Party will have just one representative who is expected to be party
chairman Younis Makhyoun. Nour announced on Sunday that it would join the
50-member committee.
In a statement issued on 25 August, Nour said it had decided to
participate in order to defend the Islamic identity of Egypt. It added that it
is against eliminating Article 219 of the 2012 constitution which defines the
"principles" of Islamic Sharia referenced in Article 2. "This
article (219) is necessary to reinforce Sunni Islam and stem the growth of
Shiism in Egypt," said the statement.
Nour complained that "the ten-member technical committee which took
charge of amending the 2012 constitution was by no means an elected body. How
can an unelected body bear the responsibility of drafting Egypt's new
constitution?"
Nour's statement was sharply criticised by secular forces. Prominent
lawyer Essam El-Islambouli said: "Nour is by no means authorised to give a
judgement on the ten-member technical committee... Let's recall that most
constitution-drafting committees formed since the January 25 Revolution in 2011
were by no means elected."
"The Nour Party itself, under the Morsi regime, called for forming
a committee to amend the 2012 constitution," he added.
El-Islambouli also said: "Article 219 is a mean of delivering an
interpretation of Islamic Sharia but it rather helps Islamists impose a strict
form of Islam on Egyptians."
Secular political activists, he added, believe "Nour's decision to
join the 50-member committee is just a tactic."
Tamarod's Badr said: "We believe this Islamist party will
eventually withdraw from the committee when it finds that most forces are in
favour of removing Article 219. It will then exploit this withdrawal to
stigmatise the new constitution as reflecting secular and anti-Islam
values."
The Freedom and Justice Party newspaper – the mouthpiece of the Muslim
Brotherhood – came out on Sunday, alleging that: "The new constitution
will give liberals and secularists the right to insult Islam and spread
immorality."
Injy Hamdi, a founding member of the April 6 Movement, on Monday asked:
"How can a religious party whose members refuse to stand up while the
national anthem is playing, incite violence against Shias, and support
codifying the marriage of children, be allowed to join the
constitution-drafting process?"
Badr said: "Secularists and revolutionaries will never allow
Islamist forces – such as the Muslim Brotherhood and Nour – to impose their
medieval viewpoints on the new constitution."
El-Islambouli argued that: "With the exception of Article 2, which
states that Islamic Sharia is the major source of legislation in Egypt, all
other Islamic Sharia articles must be removed because they aim to impose a
strict Islamic code on Egypt."
He noted that: "Al-Azhar, the highest authority in Sunni Islam,
never asked the Morsi regime for an article delivering an interpretation of
Islamic Sharia.”
He added: "The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar himself stressed many times
that Al-Azhar is not interested in drafting any articles that give an
interpretation of Islamic Sharia or even that grant its council of grand
clerics a final say on Islamic Sharia matters."
Al-Azhar stressed that the Supreme Constitutional Court must be left to
deliver the final say on Islamic Sharia issues.
The ten-member technical committee decided to
cut Article 4 short, stripping Al-Azhar's council of grand clerics the right to
have a say on Islamic Sharia issues.
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