Fate of Parliament on hold

Rana Muhammad Taha
3 Min Read
State Security Forces block access to Parliament building (photo by Hassan Ibrahim)

Saad Al-Katatny, Essam El-Erian and Mohamed Beltagy, three pillars of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), were just settling into prayer Tuesday evening in the reception of the FJP’s head quarters in Manial, as the future of the party for holding the office of

State Security Forces block access to Parliament building (photo by Hassan Ibrahim)

president was being challenged on television.Mubarak-era former prime minister Ahmed Shafiq, who was busily denigrating the FJP’s early victory announcement in favour of Mohamed Morsi at a press conference, was simply background noise to the three men.

The presidential election result was not the only contest on their minds. The three men, until a week ago, were preoccupied with the work of parliament. But, with the People’s Assembly now officially dissolved, they face a fight to restore power once more, whether it becomes two-pronged battle for the parliament and presidency, the men seem ready. El-Erian said he was “sure that the parliament is coming back with full power.” However, the security forces and the Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF) outside of parliament think otherwise.
For a second day in a row, the head of the constitutional and legislative committee in the Peoples’ Assembly, and also member of the FJP, Mohamed Al-Omda has tried to gain access to his office in parliament to attend an earlier scheduled session. He has both times
been denied access. Al-Omda insists that parliament is still valid and that “the Supreme Constitutional Court (SCC) only has the right to deem a given legal text unconstitutional or constitutional. Yet, it has no right when it comes to separation of powers.”
Al-Omda speaking with state-owned Al-Ahram stated “even if it (SCC) rules that the Peoples’ assembly is unconstitutional,

it still has no right to dissolve it.”Al-Omda met with parliamentary representative, Counsellor Mahmoud Al-Khodeiry, in a public place yesterday, after he too was denied access to parliament. Meanwhile, calls for a million-man march on Tuesday were echoed by several political figures, especially
the FJP, who denounced the constitutional decree which SCAF issued on Sunday night.
Amr Moussa, former presidential candidate, seemed to echo the words of Al-Omda when he told the Daily News Egypt that the dissolution of parliament followed by the SCAF decree was “a constitutional coup,” and refrained

from calling it a military coup.

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