Critics of Egyptian President Mohammed
Morsi slammed the country's draft constitution after it emerged from a hasty
all-night session, with opponents charging the document was a jumbled attempt
to impose Islamic law produced by what they called an unrepresentative body
dominated by Islamists.
The draft charter, which the president has
vowed to put to a national vote soon, emerged a week after Mr. Morsi issued a
decree broadly expanding his powers, spurring violent rallies against the
president in the worst crisis of his five-month term. The battle is expected to
play out in coming days both in Egypt's courts, where judges will hear
challenges to Mr. Morsi's decree, and in the streets, where supporters and
opponents have been laying plans for large rallies.
The draft constitution was finished early
Friday by Egypt's 100-member Constituent Assembly, a body that had been
conceived as representing Egyptians broadly. The group became dominated by
Islamist politicians, however, after it was boycotted by Christian and secular
members who had made up more than one-quarter of it. The assembly, bolstered
with replacement members, sprinted to complete the draft ahead of a scheduled
hearing Sunday in the country's top court, where the assembly itself faces a
challenge as unrepresentative and unconstitutional.
Assembly chairman Hossam El Gheriany said
early Friday that he and 85 members would hand-deliver the document on Saturday
to President Morsi, who would then announce the date for a national referendum.
The vote would be held by mid-December, several government officials and
members of the panel said. '
"Completing this historic step
represents important progress for Egypt and its people," said the Muslim
Brotherhood, the main party in Mr. Morsi's Islamist coalition.
The question for Mr. Morsi and his allies
is whether they can overcome a barrage of opposition that has grown in the past
week and now includes representatives of the judiciary, youth and liberal and
secular forces, and also many Christians, moderate Islamists and a large
cross-section of the population that considers itself independent.
"We are watching, we are sitting in
and we are rejecting a shameful constitution," read a large banner in
Cairo's central Tahrir Square, where tens of thousands of people flocked Friday
to demand an end to the document, the panel that drafted it and the
extraordinary powers Mr. Morsi gave himself.
"We consider the current project for a
constitution illegitimate from the standpoint of form and content," the
National Salvation Front of opposition political parties, which was formed to
confront Mr. Morsi's decree, said in a statement read Friday on Tahrir Square
by politician Mohammed ElBaradei. The square has been filled, for eight days,
by thousands of Mr. Morsi's opponents.
The president's Islamist supporters, who
had largely stayed off the streets in the past week, came out in processions
around the country Friday. They are planning a massive gathering Saturday
outside the main campus of Cairo University to rally around "Shariah
[Islamic law] and legitimacy," as described by parties in the governing
Islamist coalition.
Many legal experts said they saw major
ambiguities and contradictions in several articles dealing with the role of
Shariah, or Islamic law; the powers of the president and the legislature; the
nature of the judicial and electoral systems; and the establishment of
regulatory and oversight bodies and agencies.
The Supreme Constitutional Court is
expected to convene Sunday to take up a case asking to disband the Constituent
Assembly, which was formed by the Islamist-dominated lower chamber of
Parliament. It was later dissolved by the same court when Egypt was ruled by
the interim military that preceded Mr. Morsi's rule.
Many Egyptian legal experts now expect the
constitutional court to postpone its case on the body itself, while the
administrative branch of the judiciary hears more than a dozen separate
lawsuits filed against the decree Mr. Morsi issued last week shielding his own
decisions and those of the Constituent Assembly from the judiciary.
If the court finds the Morsi decree is
unconstitutional, it could then consider the status of the assembly.
On Friday, a group of judges with the State
Council, the body overseeing the administrative judiciary, issued a statement
lambasting Mr. Morsi's decree as "worthless" and "null and
void."
Several articles introduced to the
constitution this week are already provoking a backlash among many Egyptians.
"Every section tacitly bolsters
Islamic rule in Egypt, whether politically or socially," says George
Messiha, a member of the dissolved parliament and Coptic Christian, who was
among the 26 who boycotted or resigned from the Constituent Assembly before the
vote on the constitution Friday.
Also under scrutiny is an article banishing
members of the former ruling party of ousted president Hosni Mubarak from
political life for 10 years.
Many Morsi opponents who flocked to Tahrir
Square on Friday said the president is forcing Egyptians to choose between
living with his decrees or accepting a constitution drafted mainly by
Islamists.
"He gave us a choice between something
that smells bad and something that smells very bad," said Hani Sabet, a
retired music producer who came to the square with his wife, Rosemary, a
dramatist and novelist.
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