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    Home News Egypt's first parliament in 3 years off to chaotic start
    Egypt’s first parliament in 3 years off to chaotic start
    News, World
    January 13, 2016

    Egypt’s first parliament in 3 years off to chaotic start

    CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s first parliament in three years is off to a rocky start, with flamboyant displays of support for the president and general rowdiness leading to a cutoff of live coverage after just two sessions and drawing ridicule even from pro-government media.

    The 596-seat assembly is packed with supporters of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who led the military’s overthrow of an elected Islamist president in 2013 and commands a cult-like following among many Egyptians.

    At Sunday’s inaugural session, newly elected Speaker Ali Abdel-Al got a standing ovation after describing el-Sissi as the “leader president” and the “leader of the march,” titles usually reserved for Arab autocrats. The next day, when the speaker arrived late, he explained his tardiness by saying he was on the phone with el-Sissi, “who asked me to pass along his greetings,” drawing another round of applause.

    The chamber, which in theory is supposed to serve as a check on presidential power, has also sent el-Sissi a formal “message of support,” according to lawmakers Ibrahim Abdel-Nazeer and Ahmed Nabil, who said “It’s only natural to thank someone who has done you a great service.”

    The adoration proved too much even for some in Egypt’s ardently pro-government media. “Gentlemen, you are there to monitor the president, not to love him,” prominent TV talk show host Amr Adeeb counselled on the air.

    Lawmakers during Sunday’s session spoke on their mobile phones or took selfies. Some waved to the TV cameras or held red, white and black Egyptian flags. One lawmaker, apparently unaware his microphone was on, was heard using expletives to complain about other legislators.

    The media also complained about how some lawmakers lack mastery of Arabic grammar, when the two elected speaker deputies __ Mahmoud el-Shereef and Suleiman Wahdan — had to start over six times and twice, respectively, when they recited short Quranic verses while addressing the house.

    On Tuesday, lawmaker Tawfiq Okasha, a popular, pro-el-Sissi TV anchorman, taped his mouth shut to protest what he said was the repeated denial of his requests to address the house. “Banned by government orders from speaking inside or outside the house,” he wrote on the tape.

    The legislature is Egypt’s first since June 2012, when a court dissolved an Islamist-led body shortly before Mohammed Morsi, of the Muslim Brotherhood, was elected president.

    The new assembly, elected last year in a vote with low turnout of around 30 percent, has been billed as the final stage in Egypt’s return to democracy following Morsi’s overthrow. But the Brotherhood, which won every election following the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime authoritarian ruler Hosni Mubarak, is now outlawed as a terrorist group. Thousands of Islamists and hundreds of secular dissidents have been jailed, and a 2013 decree has virtually outlawed street demonstrations.

    The Egyptian media has remained staunchly pro-el-Sissi throughout the crackdown, but seems to have already turned on the parliament.

    “The parliament of chaos and confusion,” read the front page headline of the Wednesday edition of the Youm 7 daily. On Monday, the red banner headline of another independent daily, Al Masry Al Youm, said: “A comic start for the House of Representatives.”

    A hurried vote by a show of hands late Monday night ended live coverage of the assembly. Speaker Abdel-Al described it as a temporary measure to speed up the review of some 300 decrees issued by el-Sissi and his predecessor, interim President Adly Mansour.

    Failure to review and adopt the decrees — which include the ban on street demonstrations not sanctioned by authorities and a terror law that curbs press freedom and grants the police wide powers — would cause them to lapse.

    Egypt’s constitution, adopted in 2014 and seen as the country’s most liberal, prescribed that parliamentary sessions be held in public, but lawmakers who supported the ban and the house’s secretariat said the media’s presence in sessions meets the charter’s requirement.

    “It’s a disgusting acknowledgment of the institutional, genetic … malaise that has gripped the house from the start,” political commentator Ibrahim Issa said about the ban on live coverage in Wednesday’s edition of the Al-Maqal daily.

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    HAMZA HENDAWI

    The Bradford Era

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