The Philippine Star

Morsi takes oath as Egypt president

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CAIRO ( AFP) — Mohamed Morsi, champion of the long-banned Muslim Brotherhoo­d, took his oath yesterday as Egypt’s first civilian president, launching a tricky cohabitati­on with the military.

In a display of the popular mandate he claims after his run-off win in a divisive presidenti­al election, Morsi addressed a huge crowd on Friday in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, epicenter of the Arab Spring uprising that ousted veteran strongman Hosni Mubarak early last year.

In his speech to tens of thousands of jubilant supporters, the Islamist, who resigned from the Brotherhoo­d after his election win, was careful to reach out to Egypt’s Christian minority of some 10 percent.

He promised a “civilian state” and praised “the square of the revolution, the square of freedom,” in what he called an address to “the free world, Arabs, Muslims... the Muslims of Egypt, Christians of Egypt.”

Morsi symbolical­ly swore himself in before the crowd, saying: “I swear to preserve the republican system... and to preserve the independen­ce of Egypt.”

“I am one of you. I fear only God,” he told supporters, some of whom had waited from early in the day for his appearance.

Before his triumphant arrival, chants against the ruling military — which took over on Mubarak’s overthrow — rang out as people gathered under a searing sun.

In his speech, Morsi served Washington advance warning that his policies will be markedly different from those of his ousted predecesso­r, a staunch US ally before the 18-day uprising in January and February last year forced him out.

The president-elect said he would work to secure freedom for Omar Abdul Rahman, a blind Egyptian cleric jailed for life over the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

“I will do everything in my power to secure freedom for... detainees, including Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman,” Morsi said.

Abdul Rahman was convicted in 1995 for his role in the World Trade Center attack, plotting to bomb other New York targets including the United Nations, and a plan to assassinat­e Mubarak.

After taking the oath, Morsi will have to square up against the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, led by Mubarak’s longtime defense minister Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, which took over on the strongman’s overthrow and will retain broad powers.

 ?? AFP ?? Egypt’s Islamist president-elect Mohamed Morsi addresses tens of thousands of Egyptians in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square Friday.
AFP Egypt’s Islamist president-elect Mohamed Morsi addresses tens of thousands of Egyptians in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square Friday.

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