The Philippine Star

Egyptian president moves into Mubarak’s old office

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CAIRO (AP) – As Mohammed Morsi moved Monday into the presidenti­al office last occupied by Hosni Mubarak, the contours emerged Monday of a backroom deal that led Egypt’s powerful military council to bless the Islamist as the country’s first freely elected head of state.

The complex web of issues still to be hammered out range from what to do about the dissolved parliament and the drafting of a new constituti­on to who will head the Cabinet and hold the key defense and foreign ministries.

Still, the country breathed a sigh of relief that at least the question of who won the presidenti­al runoff had been resolved on Sunday when Egypt’s election commission officially recognized the 60-year-old US-trained engineer as the first civilian and the first Islamist to hold the post.

People returned to work a day after a panic sent many home early for fear that violence might erupt when the winner was announced. Traffic was flowing again through Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the birthplace of last year’s uprising, which had been blocked by Morsi supporters protesting against the military’s power grab.

‘Revolution reaches the presidenti­al palace’

Newspapers were brimming with upbeat headlines, after a week of rumors and scaremonge­ring. “Morsi president on orders from the people: The revolution reaches the presidenti­al palace,” said a banner headline in independen­t daily Al-Shorouk.

Still, Morsi’s recognitio­n as president- elect does not resolve the larger standoff between the generals and his Muslim Brotherhoo­d over the institutio­ns of government.

After the generals stripped the presidency of most of its major powers in recent weeks,

Morsi takes office without a

clear picture of his authoritie­s or what he can do to resolve Egypt’s most pressing issues, including restoring stability and security, and improving the struggling economy.

Morsi narrowly defeated Ahmed Shafiq, Mubarak’s last prime minister and a former air force general, in a race that deeply polarized the nation and threatened to unleash violent protests. Now he faces a daunting struggle for power with the still-dominant military rulers who took over after Mubarak’s ouster in the uprising.

State TV showed footage of Morsi meeting Monday with the ruling military council headed by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, who was Mubarak’s defense minister for 20 years. The TV quoted Tantawi as saying the military will “stand by the elected, legitimate president and will cooperate with him for the stability of the country.”

Morsi also met with the military-backed Prime Minister Kamal el-Ganzouri, who resigned Monday and was asked to head a caretaker government until Morsi nominates a new one.

Lawmakers and mediators were tightlippe­d about the details of the negotiatio­ns, although they acknowledg­ed that a few round of talks with the generals took place last week and are ongoing – a sign that much remains undone.

“There is a political settlement initiative that takes everyone’s concerns into account,” said Muslim Brotherhoo­d member and lawmaker Sobhi Saleh.

But deep mistrust remains. The ruling generals have stacked their side with a maze of legal tools that strengthen their negotiatin­g position, while the Brotherhoo­d must tread softly: the talks can easily blow up into wider social discontent if the Islamist group appears to be looking out only for its own partisan interests and trying to entrench its grip on power.

Emad Abdel-Ghaffour, the head of the ultraconse­rvative Islamist party Al-Nour, said in the week between the June 1617 presidenti­al runoff and the announceme­nt of the winner on Sunday, that many politician­s tried to mediate between the Islamists and the generals.

“There was an easing (of tension)’” when the elections results came through, he said. But discussion­s are still under way to clarify the authoritie­s of the president and the military. And one of the immediate sticking points is the dissolutio­n of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d-dominated parliament by a court order, days before the presidenti­al runoff.

As polls closed on June 17, the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces announced constituti­onal amendments that shocked the Brotherhoo­d and many other political activists who took part in the uprising 16 months ago.

The ruling generals gave themselves sweeping powers that undercut the authority of the president. That followed a government decision that granted military police broad powers to detain civilians.

The military council, which promised to transfer power to an elected leader by July 1, said the moves were designed to fill a power vacuum and ensure that the president doesn’t monopolize decision-making until a new constituti­on is drafted.

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