Egyptian Military Ousts Morsi, Suspends Constitution

DeepseekerADS

Gold Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2013
Messages
14,880
Reaction score
21,747
Golden Thread
0
Location
SW, VA - Bull Mountain
Detector(s) used
CTX, Excal II, EQ800, Fisher 1260X, Tesoro Royal Sabre, Tejon, Garrett ADSIII, Carrot, Stealth 920iX, Keene A52
Primary Interest:
Other
Egyptian Military Ousts Morsi, Suspends Constitution

On Wednesday, Gen. Abdel Fatah Said Al-Sisi announced a military coup in Egypt. He said that the Constitution had been suspended, that early elections would take place, and that there would be a “code of ethics” for the media. He stated that the chief of the Constitutional court would be taking charge during a transitional period before another election. He said the new government would be “diverse and include all the people,” and that the constitution would be revised to reverse changes made by ousted Muslim Brotherhood President Mohammed Morsi.

Al-Sisi said there would be a code of ethics for the media that would “establish values and ethics for the media to follow.” He also stated that there would be a committee for reconciliation from leaders who are credible. The armed forces, he said, call on the great Egyptian people with its various groups to continue to have peaceful protests and end the crisis. He also said that the military warned it would take action against anyone moving beyond peaceful protest.

“May Allah preserve Egypt and its people,” al-Sisi concluded.

UPDATES: A Morsi aide has said that Morsi has been removed to an undisclosed location.

Dr. Mohammed El-Baradei, a leader of the anti-Morsi opposition, stated that he hopes "all of us come back as reconciled people together. I hope that this 'road map' will be a beginning to continue with the revolution for which the Egyptian people have spent dearly to achieve social justice for every Egyptian man and woman."

CNN reports the sound of gunfire near pro-Morsi demonstrators, adding that Muslim Brotherhood followers had been training with sticks in preparation for violence. The crowd is chanting "victory or martyrdom." The Egyptian military, CNN reports, is 400 to 500 yards down from the pro-Morsi demonstrations.

Associated Press reports that Egyptian defense leaders have told US officials that there will be no long-term military rule, telling Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsy that a civilian government would be installed shortly. The Egyptian military has reportedly stated that it will protect US citizens in Egypt. AP also reports that American Councils for International Education in Washington, D.C., announced that it would be evacuating 18 Arabic language program students from Egypt to Morocco thanks to security concerns. The students hail from the Universities of Oklahoma, Michigan, Texas, Maryland, and Michigan State.

President Mohammed Morsi's Twitter account has called the military's announcement a "full coup." Morsi has been quoted as stating that today's events "represent a full coup categorically rejected by all the free men of our nation." CNN reports that Morsi appealed to his supporters to react peacefully to the military action.

Meanwhile, Reuters reports that the time frame of the early election will be determined by the interim administration. Christiane Amanpour of CNN says that Egyptian sources inform her it could be nine months to a year before new elections.

The US embassy in Cairo is closed Wednesday and was scheduled to be closed Thursday thanks to July 4, as well as for the weekend, according to CNN. The Washington Post reports that US embassy personnel in Cairo has ordered mandatory evacuation of all non-essential personnel, stating, "We will begin departures immediately, with the expectation that all evacuees will have left for the States by this weekend."

All Muslim Brotherhood television channels in Egypt have now gone off the air, according to UPI. Al-Ahram reports that Al-Hafez and Al-Nas both went off the air immediately after al-Sisi's speech.

Reuters reports that the head of the constitutional court will be sworn in tomorrow as interim head of state in Egypt.
 

Only time will tell how this will turn out. I'm hoping and praying for the best.

-Ammo
 

Only time will tell how this will turn out. I'm hoping and praying for the best.

-Ammo
It's basicly a lateral change. They will still hate US based on 'religious' principals. Some things never change. Look at Iraq. It's the same situation. Frank...

thumb up 700 invert red.webp
 

It's basicly a lateral change. They will still hate US based on 'religious' principals. Some things never change. Look at Iraq. It's the same situation. Frank...
"They" can be construed as a very broad net. "They" their government. "they" their churches, "they" their people?
It's almost like saying "WE" hate "them".

Many, I feel, fail to recognize, their are many Christians, Jews, and even moderate Muslims, who live in these areas, and they too, are persecuted, harassed, etc..... can you say Egyptian Christian Coptic Church? Orthodox C. Church of the Holy C, I think they (The ME radicals), have drove the Jewish ppl there, practically out and/or underground. The radicals have been pulling non-radicals from churches for decades now and slaughtering them, (usually by firing squad, by the 10's, 20's and 30 or more at a time.)

My best friend is Assyrian Orthodox Christian, as is their whole family. They lived in B, along side Muslins, Jews, and existed peacefully together. They as a ppl love us American ppl, (they don't so much lke our government or capitalism, big business). They (ME), who are intelligent enough to know and understand ppl, know, we(americans) are also ppl, and many of us, don't agree with or like our own g'ment. They (ME) are not all stupid, backland raised, superstitious zealots. Many are highly educated and intelligent. I have no problem with the ones I know and the ones that no me. Here in America, we have some pretty uneducated, racist, closed-minded radicals, too, from many different sides of the fence.

I feel the rigidity of mind, that many folks have as far as, broad pasting labels on ppl because of skin color, race, sex, religion, where they were born, is the major roadblock to ppl being kinder to their fellow man, and prohibits mutual cooperation for the better of all. Eveyone puffs up under a label of "I am this or I am that, and I am the greatest, so I can judge you as lesser". I'm sorry, I just find it difficult to paint labels on ppl this way, with such a broad paint brush.
Remember pride goes before the fall.
 

OK, lets cut to the chase. Why mix everybody in? My statement refers to radical Islam. A religion that is guided by a harsh set of rules and the idea that they should kill infidels (non relievers in their radical "religion"). Is that plain enough? Frank...

111-1 profileblk.webp
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom