Egypt: Officers can 'shoot to kill' in case of post-election attacks on police
updated 3:27 AM EDT, Sun June 24, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Official results will be announced at 3 p.m. (9 a.m. ET) Sunday
- Ahmed Shafik served as a military officer and prime minister under Hosni Mubarak
- "Did we really have a revolution if Shafik wins?" one Egyptian asks
- Opponent Mohamed Morsi represents the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood
"Minister Mohamed Ibrahim
has given police forces orders to shoot to kill against anyone
attempting to attack police stations after the results," interior
ministry spokesman Gen. Marwan Mustapha said. "Increased security has
been dispersed in the side streets of (Cairo's) Tahrir Square to protect
government buildings."
Egypt is set to declare
the winner of its crucial presidential election at 3 p.m. (9 a.m. ET)
Sunday, according to the Supreme Presidential Elections Commission.
But hours before the announcement, a former prime minister made a bold declaration on his Facebook page: "President Ahmed Shafik, Egypt 2012."
The claim of victory
follows days of conflicting reports on who was leading the race and
heightened concerns that Shafik, who served under ousted leader Hosni
Mubarak, would give new life to the old guard and essentially nullify
democratic gains won after last year's Egyptian revolution.
"Did we really have a
revolution if Shafik wins?" prominent novelist Alaa al-Aswany said via
Twitter. "For the thousandth time this is not a battle between the
military and the (Muslim) Brotherhood, it is a battle of the Egyptian
people with the military regime that ruled us with an iron fist for 60
years."
Like Mubarak, Shafik
is a former air force officer with close ties to Egypt's powerful
military and is "the quintessential candidate of the
counter-revolution," said Khaled Elgindy, a visiting fellow at the
Brookings Institution in Washington.
Photos: Political uncertainty in Egypt
Shafik is running against Mohamed Morsi
of the Freedom and Justice Party, the political arm of the Muslim
Brotherhood. The election between Shafik and Morsi will determine
Egypt's first democratically elected president.
Egypt announcing election results Sunday
On Saturday, authorities reviewed about 400 electoral violation reports submitted by the two candidates.
Egyptians protest ahead of poll result
Ahead of the highly
anticipated results, Egypt's all-powerful military leaders warned of
potential chaos but said they won't reverse their widely deplored
constitutional and judicial changes. They also warned politicians to
keep a lid on election-related unrest.
Nawaz: Egypt looking more like Pakistan
"We will face anyone who
will pose a challenge to the public and private sectors with an iron
fist," the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) said.
Egypt's constitutional
court dissolved the lower house of parliament this month, extending the
military's power and sparking accusations of a coup d'etat.
Adding to the electoral
tension is the question of how much power the new president will
actually wield now that the military council has full legislative
authority.
Under an interim
constitutional declaration, the military council retains the power to
make laws and budget decisions until a new constitution is written and a
new parliament elected.
The declaration said
Supreme Council members "shall decide all matters related to military
affairs, including the appointment of its leaders." The president has
the power to declare war, it says, but only "after the approval" of the
Supreme Council.
The military council
said it does not favor one political entity over another and respects
the rights of Egyptians to protest but stressed the importance of
self-restraint and respect for authority.
The Supreme Council
urged political entities to respect democracy and "abstain from all
possible acts that may descend the country into a full chaos."
Egyptian reform leader
Mohamed ElBaradei -- the former head of the United Nations nuclear
watchdog agency and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate -- said that if Shafik
is declared the winner, "we are in for a lot of instability and violence
... a major uprising."
He said he isn't as worried about a Morsi victory because Shafik supporters are unlikely to take their anger to the streets.
ElBaradei described the current situation as "a total, complete 100% mess."
CNN's Saad Abedine and Ben Wedeman and journalists Mohamed Fadel Fahmy and Ian Lee contributed to this report. end quote from:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/24/world/africa/egypt-politics/index.html
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