Philippine Daily Inquirer

New crisis looms in Egypt over parliament’s fate

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CAIRO—A new showdown loomed in Egypt on Monday as the country’s highest court stood by its ruling that dissolved parliament last month, challengin­g the new Islamist president’s plans to reconvene the lower chamber in defiance of the military.

If he goes ahead, Mohammed Morsi would be taking a dramatic step away from the outreach that characteri­zed his first days in office. It’s a tough fight, though, and the president could lose it along with more of his already diminished powers.

The military, which handed power to Morsi on June 30 af- imacy, constituti­on and law” —language that means it will not stand by and watch the rulings of the country’s top court ignored or breached.

At the same time, the Supreme Constituti­onal Court sent out a clear signal that it will not bow to Morsi’s wish, saying in a statement after an emergency meeting on Monday that its June 14 ruling to invalidate the Islamist-dominated parliament was final and binding.

“Morsi’s move sets the stage for a potentiall­y very serious political and constituti­onal crisis,” said Michael W. Hanna, an expert on Egypt from the New York-based Century Foundation.

Morsi, through his spokespers­on Yasser Ali, insisted his decision to reconvene the 508-seat chamber on Tuesday was an “assertion of the popular will.”

His presidenti­al decree also calls for new parliament­ary elections after a new constituti­on is adopted, something that is not expected before the end of the year—in effect, according legitimacy to a legislatur­e the country’s highest court ruled to be invalid.

In its ruling last month, the supreme court determined that a third of parliament’s members were illegally elected under a law that allowed candidates from political parties to compete for seats that had been set aside for independen­ts. Based on that verdict, the then-ruling military disbanded the house, in which Islamists controlled more than 70 percent of the seats.

In the days that followed, the generals pushed through a series of decrees that gave themselves legislativ­e powers, as well as control over the drafting of a new constituti­on and the national budget. It also stripped Morsi of significan­t presidenti­al powers.

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