Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

Egypt court declares part of election law unconstitutional | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
Select Page
Media ID: 55341926
Caption:

Egyptian judges of the Supreme Constitutional Court during a session to rule into election laws, in Cairo, Egypt, 01 March 2015. (EPA)


Egyptian judges of the Supreme Constitutional Court sit during a session to rule into election laws, in Cairo, Egypt, on March 1, 2015. (EPA)

Egyptian judges of the Supreme Constitutional Court sit during a session to rule into election laws, in Cairo, Egypt, on March 1, 2015. (EPA)

Cairo, AP—An Egyptian court on Sunday ruled as unconstitutional a clause in the election law that draws voting districts, a verdict that is almost certain to delay parliamentary elections scheduled to start later this month.

President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi said in a statement that he has ordered the government to adopt the “necessary legislative amendments” within a month to comply with the Supreme Constitutional Court’s ruling.

Another court is likely to rule later this month on whether the election should be delayed, but a date for the new vote would be decided by the High Elections Commission, which went into an emergency meeting on Sunday following the verdict.

Egypt has not had an elected legislature since 2012, when the Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that the lower chamber was not constitutionally elected. Islamist supporters of then-president Mohamed Mursi besieged the court ahead of a hearing in which it was expected to issue a similar ruling against the upper chamber, preventing the judges from reaching their chambers.

The forthcoming election is the third and final step in a road map announced by Sissi when he ousted Mursi in July 2013 amid massive protests against the Islamist leader’s yearlong rule.

The first two steps were the adoption of a new constitution by referendum in 2014 and a presidential election that was comfortably won later that year by Sisi, who has ruled by decree since coming to office in June.

Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood swept the first free parliamentary elections after the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. The group is now officially considered a terrorist organization, and thousands of its members, including most of its top leaders, are in jail.