Judge Adly
Mansour has been sworn in as interim president in Egypt after Mohammed Morsi's
outing, but the real powerhouse is the military, which is led by General
Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.
"I
swear by God to honor the law and the constitution and to serve justice."
Barely 24 hours after President Mohammed Morsi had been ousted, Adly Mansour
was sworn in as interim president.
Army head
Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi had announced Morsi's ouster in a televised address the
previous evening. After days of mass protests against Morsi, the general had
set the first democratically elected president in Egypt a 48-hour ultimatum to
respond to the will of the people. Until fresh elections are called, Mansour is
to serve as interim president along with a technocrat government.
Mansour
served under Morsi, Mubarak
"Mansour
is relatively unknown in Egypt's political scene," says Christian
Achrainer, political scientist at the German Council on Foreign Relations
(DGAP).
The
67-year-old Mansour, who has been working for the country's constitutional
court since 1992, had been in office as president of the court for just two
days when the military pushed Morsi out. Morsi had appointed Mansour to the
post after his predecessor, Maher al-Behairis retired at the end of June.
A new law
which came into force after Hosni Mubarak was toppled forces the president to
appoint one of the three longest-serving vice presidents as president of the
court.
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| Mansour will serve as interim president |
During the
row between Morsi's government and the judiciary Mansour kept a low profile,
according to Achrainer. Morsi had suspended amendments to the constitution and
stripped the constitutional court of its right to rule on the legitimacy of the
constitutional committee, which was dominated by Morsi's Islamists.
In June,
the Supreme Constitutional Court had ruled the upper house of parliament, which
was dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood, unlawful.
Despite his
low profile, Mansour was involved in some key decisions after Mubarak's fall.
"Before the last presidential elections, he was one of the people who
fought for supporters of the old regime to be allowed to take part in the
vote," says Achrainer, which will not work in his favor. Neither will his
long career in the judiciary under Mubarak.
'Young'
general in key role
But the
military is the most powerful force in the country - now as much as after the
coup of 1952 and after the fall of Mubarak in 2011.
"Without
the armed forces Mansour would not be president, they are in the driving
seat," says Ronald Meinardus of the Friedrich-Naumann Foundation's bureau
in Cairo.
Abdel
Fattah el-Sissi is the head of the armed forces. He succeeded Hussein Tantawi
as defense minister in August 2012 and is a practicing Muslim. But he was also
"educated in the tradition of Nasserism," says Meinardus. "The
Egyptian military comes from that tradition. The officers are actually
secular." Former president Abdel Nasser was known as a vehement critic of
the Muslim Brotherhood.
![]() |
| El-Sissi is one of the youngest army generals |
Aged 58,
El-Sissi is one of the youngest generals and didn't serve in the wars against
Israel in 1967 and 1973. After the fall of Mubarak he became the youngest
member of the ruling Supreme Military Council and head of the military
intelligence service.
After
Mubarak stepped down, el-Sissi came under fire for trying to justify the sexual
harassment of Egyptian women by soldiers as virginity tests. After fierce
international criticism he revised his stance and announced the end of such
"examinations" as he called them.
"The
military's dictatorship after the fall of Mubarak wasn't exactly a glorious
phase in Egyptian history," Meinardus says of the time when Tantawi headed
the military council for 17 months and gave it sweeping political powers.
New
constitution, old interests
By
appointing Mansour as interim president the army is not taking center stage
this time. El-Sissi told the media that the military would "steer well
clear of politics."
The Islamic
constitution that Morsi had put in place has already been suspended and a new
committee has been set up to work on a new constitution, which will be put to a
referendum.
But the
interests of the military are always in the background, according to Achrainer.
"The economic empire of the military must not be put in jeopardy, and the
country's leaders must not get involved in military matters," he says.
Under
Morsi, the military felt threatened and decided to act.
Related Articles:
Egypt army topples Morsi
"TIME TO SAY GOOD-BYE" - The Last 18 years – Dec 8, 2012 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Carroll)
(Subjects: Who is Kryon, God, Love, Great Central Sun, (Old) Soul, Benevolent Design, 1987 - Harmonic Convergence (11:11), 36 years galactic window (Precession), 26.000 years cycle, Mayan Calendar, Midpoint on 21-12-2012, “TIME TO SAY GOOD-BYE” song – Composer, Human Consciousness, Conceptional Thinking, Old and New energy, Middle East, Protest against the new leader in Egypt because he is of an old energy, Syria is a Nightmare, Libya, People of Iran, Israel, Higher Self, You did it !, Change of Paradigm, 2012, US/Russia, Global Unity, ... etc.)



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