Atlantic Council

Useful Links

 

Parliamentary Elections

  • Preparing for Egypt’s Parliamentary Elections: A Guide (English)
  • Electoral Law (Arabic)
  • Electoral Law Amendments (Arabic)

Legal Framework

  • President Mohamed Morsi's Constitutional Decree - December 9, 2012 (Arabic) (English)
  • Final Draft of Constitution, published November 29, 2012 (Arabic) (English) (Audio)
  • President Mohamed Morsi's Constitutional Decree - November 22, 2012 (Arabic) (English)
  • Draft of the Constitution, published October 24, 2012) (Arabic)
  • Draft of the Constitution, published October 16, 2012 (Arabic) (English)
  • President Mohamed Morsi's Decree Pardoning January 25 Prisoners - October 8 (English) (Arabic
  • President Mohamed Morsi's Constitutional Declaration - August 12 (English) (Arabic)
  • President Mohamed Morsi’s Decree reinstating the dissolved parliament – July 8 (English) (Arabic)
  • Renaissance (Nahda) Project (English
  • Morsi Meter (English) (Arabic)
  • SCAF Amendments to Interim Constitution - June 17, 2012 (English) (Arabic)
  • Interim Constitution (full text, English and Arabic), ratified by popular referendum on March 23, 2011)
  • Law on the Presidential Election, No. 174, 2005 (Arabic)
  • Electoral laws for the People’s Assembly and Shura Council (full text, Arabic, amended July 19, 2011)
  • Law on Non-Governmental Organizations, No. 84/2002 (English
  • Law on the People’s Assembly, amended October 2011 (PDF, Arabic)
  • Supra-Constitutional Principles (English) (Arabic)
  • The Final Draft Wording of the Articles on Defense and National Security in the New Constitution (English) (Arabic)
  • Leaked Articles of the Draft Constitution (English)

 

Egyptian Government Resources

  • Official Facebook page of President Mohamed Morsi (Arabic)
  • Official Facebook page of Prime Minister Hesham Qandil (Arabic)
  • Official Facebook page of Presidential Spokesman Yasser Ali (Arabic)
  • Official Facebook page of the Supreme Council of the Armed forces (Arabic)
  • Official website of the Cabinet (English) (Arabic)
  • Ministry of Interior (English) (Arabic)
  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs (English) (Arabic)
  • Ministry of Finance (English) (Arabic)
  • Ministry of International Cooperation (Arabic)
  • Ministry of Social Solidarity (Arabic)
  • Ministry of Information (Arabic)
  • Ministry of Industry & Foreign Trade (English) (Arabic)
 

Economy

 

Egyptian Media

Think Tanks and NGOs:

 

EgyptSource
Printer-friendly version
Subscribe via RSS

Top News: SPEC Rejects Appeal for Ten Disqualified Candidates

Mara Revkin | April 18, 2012
Salafi supporters

Egypt's Supreme Presidential Election Commission (SPEC) announced on April 17 its final decision to disqualify ten candidates from the presidential race, including the Salafi candidate Hazem Salah Abu-Ismail, Muslim Brotherhood Deputy Leader Khairat El-Shater and Mubarak's former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman.

PROTESTS:

1) 34 parties and political movements (including the January 25 coalition, the National Association for Change and the Adl Party) have called for a mass demonstration on Friday, April 20, under the slogan “No to Writing the Constitution Under Military Rule.” The protest also calls for canceling Article 28 of the Constitutional Declaration, which grants the Supreme Presidential Election Commission immunity against challenges to its decisions. The groups’ joint statement also accused the Muslim Brotherhood of allying with the military and “dragging the revolution backwards.” [al-Masry al-Youm, English, 4/18/2012] [al-Masry al-Youm, Arabic, 4/18/2012] [al-Shorouk, Arabic, 4/18/2012]

ELECTIONS:

2) Egypt's Supreme Presidential Election Commission (SPEC) announced on April 17 its final decision to disqualify ten candidates from the presidential race, including the Salafi candidate Hazem Salah Abu-Ismail, Muslim Brotherhood Deputy Leader Khairat El-Shater and Mubarak's former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman. [al-Ahram, English, 4/18/2012]

3) Shortly after the SPEC’s ruling, the Muslim Brotherhood and the FJP issued a joint statement condemning the decision and confirming that Mohamed Morsi (nominated as an alternate) would be the Brotherhood's official candidate: “The Muslim Brotherhood and the FJP are astonished at the rejection of Khairat El-Shater's appeal and the decision to exclude him from the race despite the presentation of documents that prove he received a rehabilitation from the military court.”  The head of the Brotherhood’s legal committee condemned the decision as “a scandalous political plan.” [al-Ahram, English, 4/18/2012] [al-Ahram, English, 4/18/2012]

NGO TRIAL:

4) The Cairo Criminal Court decided on April 18 to postpone the trial of NGO workers accused of operating illegally until June 5. The trial was adjourned following a request from defense lawyers to check the material evidence obtained by the court during the April 18 court session, including laptops, CDs, projectors, maps, graphs, safes and documents confiscated when Egyptian security forces raided the offices of accused NGOs last year. [al-Masry al-Youm, English, 4/18/2012] [al-Shorouk, Arabic, 4/18/2012]

PARLIAMENT:

5) A People’s Assembly committee has approved in principle a bill that would grant comprehensive amnesty to people suspected or convicted of political charges under Hosni Mubarak’s rule. The draft pardon,  proposed by MP Amer Abdel Rahim of Jama’a al-Islamiya’s Construction and Development Party , would apply to convictions handed down between 6 October 1981 — the date of Anwar al-Sadat’s assassination — and 11 February 2011, when Mubarak resigned.  [al-Masry al-Youm, English, 4/18/2012]

Photo Credit: Getty

Trackback URL for this post:

http://www.acus.org/trackback/68788

About EgyptSource

 

EgyptSource, a project of the Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, follows Egypt’s transition and provides a platform for Egyptian perspectives on the major issues – economic, political, legal, religious and human rights – that are at stake in the post-Mubarak era.

If you are interested in submitting an article for publication on EgyptSource, please send an inquiry via email with a short outline of your idea. 

The views expressed in EgyptSource are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Atlantic Council, its staff, or its supporters.

 

Follow us on Twitter: @EgyptSource

 

EgyptSource Team

 

Michele Dunne
Director, Rafik Hariri Center 
mdunne@acus.org

Follow on Twitter

 

Nancy Messieh
Editor, EgyptSource, MENASource
nmessieh@acus.org 

Follow on Twitter

 

Tarek Radwan
Resident Contributor, EgyptSource; Editor, MENASource
tradwan@acus.org

Follow on Twitter

 

EgyptSource Newsletter

 

Click here to sign up for the weekly EgyptSource newsletter. 

Faces of Egypt 

 

Journalist and videographer Abanoub Emad explains the drive behind his work: “I want to cover the truth..If it was just a job for me I wouldn't risk my life, but this is what I want to do…and this is what differentiates the quality of work. You can tell who's doing it for the sake of doing it, and who's doing it because it's what they love to do” 

At twenty-two, Amr El Salanekly has won the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative fellowship, co-founded a social incubator and an educational platform for underprivileged kids, turned down a job with Bangladeshi Nobel Laureate Mohammad Yunus’ Grameen Bank, and raised hundreds of thousands of Egyptian pounds for community projects in Egypt.

Check out the rest of the Faces of the New Egypt series here

 

About the Contributors

 

Alaa Al Aswany, the Arab world's bestselling novelist, is the author of The Yacoubian Building, Chicago, and Friendly Fire. His work is published in thirty-one languages worldwide.  Read his EgyptSource posts here

 

Yussef Auf is an Egyptian judge and 2012 Humphrey Fellow at American University’s Washington College of Law. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Constitutional Law and Political Systems at Cairo University. Read his EgyptSource posts here.

 

 

Nadine Abdalla is a PhD Fellow at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin and a writer for Egyptian newspaper, Al-Masry Al-Youm. Read her EgyptSource posts here. 

Amr Hamzawy joined the Department of Public Policy and Administration at the American University in Cairo in 2011, where he continues to serve today. He is a former member of parliament and a member of the National Salvation Front. Read his EgyptSource posts here

Jayson Casper is a writer with Arab West Report, Christianity Today, and Lapido Media. He blogs on Egyptian politics, religion, and culture at A Sense of BelongingRead his EgyptSource posts here.

Wael Eskandar is a blogger and a writer for Egypt's Ahram Online. He has written for publications like Daily News Egypt and Community Times. Read his EgyptSource posts here.

  

Soraya Morayef is a journalist and writer based in Cairo. She blogs under suzeeinthecity.wordpress.comRead her EgyptSource posts here.

Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi is a UAE based political commentator. He tweets as @SultanAlQassemiRead his EgyptSource posts here.

 

Magdy Samaan is a freelance journalist and a 2011 MENA Democracy Fellow at the World Affairs Institute. Read his EgyptSource posts here.

 

Haitham Tabei is a special correspondent for the Washington Post and Asharq Saudi newspaper in Cairo.

Read his EgyptSource posts here.

Featured Videos