Egypt’s ruling generals blunted the power of the presidency shortly after polls closed last weekend, making Morsi’s victory partially symbolic. But the win represented a remarkable turn of fortunes for an organization that was outlawed and systematically suppressed for decades, including under the three-decade regime of deposed former president Hosni Mubarak.
Election officials said Morsi beat former Mubarak prime minister Ahmed Shafiq, whom he had faced in a runoff. Presidential election commission chief Farouk Sultan said Morsi won by a slim margin, winning almost 52 percent of votes cast.
Mohammed Morsi |
As soon as the news of Morsi’s victory broke Sunday, Brotherhood supporters in Tahrir Square erupted in cheers and fired off a flurry of firecrackers. Egyptians flooded in on foot, motorcycles and in cars. Morsi supporters embraced and danced to an near-deafening soundtrack of honking and cheers and euphoric crowds shouted “Down with military rule!”
Karim Ahmed, 23, was wrapped in a Morsi poster.
"Injustice can never come back,” he said. “This is the choice of the people!”
Even those who were lukewarm to Morsi were excited that the country had had a free vote.
“It’s a reality now, said Mohammed Said, 32, a sweat drenched flag vendor in the square.
A Morsi loss could have generated serious political instability; Brotherhood supporters had vowed to continue their demonstrations if that was the outcome, saying it would have amounted to electoral theft.
Not long after he was declared the winner, the Brotherhood’s official Twitter account tweeted that Morsi had begun “talks to form his presidential team and a new cabinet that will truly represent Egypt after revolution.” Morsi had sought in recent days to gain the confidence of liberal and secular factions, promising a “broad coalition government” that would preserve the rights of women and Christians.
The Muslim Brotherhood said Sunday that Morsi had resigned from the organization and its political party, in line with a campaign pledge to remain independent.
But the terms under which Morsi will hold office, and the sway his Islamist supporters will have, remain uncertain. The announcement capped a week of intrigue and rumors about whether the country’s ruling generals were seeking to broker a power-sharing deal with the Brotherhood before signing off on the 60-year-old group’s electoral victory.
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Now that a muslim or somebody they supported won, no problem! If it were 2 b otherwise, there would ve been chaos all over Egypt. I pray the world wil nt just watch and let dem take over in other countries 4 fear of muslim violence. God save dis civilisation.
ReplyDeleteNow that a muslim or somebody they supported won, no problem! If it were 2 b otherwise, there would ve been chaos all over Egypt. I pray the world wil nt just watch and let dem take over in other countries 4 fear of muslim violence. God save dis civilisation. I'm just thinking out aloud pls.
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