Arab Times

Egypt faces poll challenge, credit downgrade

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CAIRO, Dec 24, (AFP): A credit rating downgrade Monday and an opposition challenge to a constituti­onal referendum which the ruling Islamists say they won added to Egypt’s political crisis and piled pressure on President Mohamed Morsi.

Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhoo­d says its numbers show 64 percent of voters backed the new charter, despite weeks of protests by the secular-leaning opposition.

But the electoral commission said it was investigat­ing opposition allegation­s of fraud during the two-stage referendum held on Dec 15 and 22.

Official results would not be released until the commission could show the voting “really reflects the will of the Egyptian people,” commission official Mohamed el-Tanobly told AFP.

The National Salvation Front opposition coalition warned that, regardless of the outcome, “the referendum is not the end of the road. It is only one battle.”

That raised the prospect of more protests like the ones which have confronted Morsi for more than a month, leaving the Arab world’s most popu- lous nation polarised and its political institutio­ns paralysed.

Clashes on Dec 5 outside Morsi’s Cairo palace killed eight people and wounded hundreds, prompting the army to deploy troops and tanks.

Rating agency Standard and Poor’s on Monday downgraded Egypt’s longterm credit rating one notch to ‘B-’ and

said it could be cut further if foreign exchange reserves or the government’s deficit sharply worsen.

“We expect political tensions to remain elevated, with no clear indication that rival factions will be brought to a point at which they can contribute to addressing Egypt’s economic, fiscal, and external challenges,” the agency said.

Agreement on a $4.8 billion loan from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund was put on hold this month, accentuati­ng the risk of Egypt’s currency collapsing.

The central bank has run through more than half its foreign reserves since the ouster of longtime president Hosni Mubarak early last year, leaving less than $15 billion.

Egypt’s economy, once a vibrant opportunit­y for investors, was brought low by the 2011 revolution and has continued to lag under Morsi.

It was unclear how a political remedy could be reached.

Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhoo­d are using their newfound power to spearhead rapid changes they contend will put Egypt on the path to stability.

But the largely urban, liberal, leftwing, Christian and secular opposition feels alienated by Morsi’s steamrolli­ng tactics, and worries the new charter will open the door to strict Islamic law, or sharia.

Merzek, a 29-year-old health ministry employee in the city of Minya south of Cairo who declined to give his last name, said the Islamists “say they want to apply sharia even on Christians. If that happens, we can’t say no, but I will stay in my country because, if we go, Egypt is finished.”

His wife, Mariane, 25, added: “If they try to force the (Islamic) headscarf on us, I will certainly not wear it.”

The direction has also generated internatio­nal unease.

Germany is echoing the opposition’s call for an investigat­ion into the alleged voting fraud.

The United States, which provides Egypt’s powerful military with $1.3 billion in aid per year, has kept mostly quiet on the turmoil buffeting its key Middle East ally.

But the Republican chairwoman of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the US House of Representa­tives, Ileana RosLehtine­n, called the vote “a defeat for the Egyptian people” at the hands of “an Islamic dictatorsh­ip.”

Only Iran, which is trying to claim the Arab Spring was inspired by its own 1979 Islamic revolution, welcomed the referendum. It said it promoted “progressiv­e, Islamic and revolution­ary goals” in Egypt.

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