Welcome to SAMAA TV
 
SAMAA SMS News Alerts
 
England beat South Africa by seven wickets - Champions Trophy         Practical initiatives must be taken to curb power cuts, instructs LHC         Ruling parties agree to form smaller cabinet in Balochistan         Afghan government to shun U.S. talks with Taliban         Acer sees tablet, notebook PC shipments to be flat in second quarter         Indian GP organisers dismiss race rumour         Daniel Radcliffe proves acting skills in London stage role         Indian rupee gains, but still close to record low         Meera wants to compete with Priyanka Chopra         Gujranwala motorbikes’ show room blast injures seven         PM Nawaz Sharif instructs to complete Neelum-Jehlum Hydro Power Project before 2016         NEPRA approves increase in power tariff by Rs1.12 per unit         South Africa bowled out for 175 by England in semi         Shahbaz Sharif demands report of woman, children recovery from Lahore’s hotel         Internet monitoring must have proper limits, Merkel tells Obama         Afghans must talk to each other for peace, Obama says         PML (N) suspends female MPA over bus hostess slapping incident         Man gunned down 2 clerks in Rajanpur after not getting salary         Suicide bomber, gunmen attack UN office in Somalia         No increased GST on food items, medicines: Govt clarifies in SC         Tata Motors upgrades cars as rivals launch new ones         3841 cases of diarrhoea reported across Sindh         Nisar pledges mechanism to unmask corrupt lawmakers         KP govt decides to call APC on terrorism         HEC submits to SC fresh list of 13 MNAs having suspicious degrees         Rohani once approved of hiding Iran atomic work         Semifinal: England opt to bowl VS South Africa         Airbus wins $7.5 billion A350 order from Air France-KLM         41 children die of measles during last 3 months in Faisalabad         Asian businesses optimistic; sentiment in India falls         Karachi violence leaves 6 more people dead         Khan blames injustice for social ills as he makes maiden parliament speech         Afghanistan suspends security pact talks with US amid Taliban peace process         Pakistan, IMF discuss fresh $5 bln loan package         India opens unprovoked fire along Line of Control         IHC nullifies amnesty scheme for smuggled cars, orders auction         Stay against Zaka Ashraf extended         Hot & dry weather to prevail across country         Journalist who brought down US general is killed in Los Angeles car crash         Workers’ killing: MQM stages walkout in National Assembly         Justin Bieber hits photographer in Los Angeles car scrape         Hezbollah takes Syrian centre-stage, yet remains in shadows         Amitav Ghosh among 12 vying for international writing prize         Imran Khan takes oath as MNA         WikiLeaks' Assange fears US, says will stay in London embassy         Balochistan: Abductors release prominent surgeon Dr. Mubashir Ahsan         Obama to prod West to take on global challenges in Berlin speech         Nikkei outperforms Asian stocks as Fed looms         NSA head, US lawmakers defend surveillance programs         India monsoon floods kill scores         United States to meet Taliban to seek Afghan peace         Teen country singer Bradbery captures 'The Voice' season crown         Colorado wildfire destroys more than 500 homes         Mardan blast toll rises to 34 as four more die overnight         Dozens held in Turkey, silent protester goes viral         Quake shakes Peru's capital of Lima         Four from U.S. forces killed in attack in Afghanistan          History being repeated against MQM: Altaf         Russia evacuates thousands after blasts at army munitions store         Optimism fading, Brazil protests put leaders on alert         Ten more die in Karachi unrest in last 24 hours         MQM to hold public referendum tomorrow on joining Sindh government        
Egypt's reinstated parliament to convene Tuesday
Monday, July 09, 2012 7:07:25 PM | Comments (0)
Egypt's reinstated parliament to convene Tuesday

CAIRO: Egypt's parliament speaker has invited the lower house to convene on Tuesday following a decision by the president to reinstate the assembly, in a challenge to the military that disbanded the legislature.

Saad al-Katatni "has called on parliament to convene at 2:00 pm (1200 GMT) on Tuesday," the official MENA news agency reported.

The call by Katatni, who belongs to the Muslim Brotherhood, comes after President Mohamed Morsi ordered the return of the Islamist-led parliament which was dissolved by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) based on a court ruling.

The move has put Morsi, who stepped down from the Brotherhood when he was sworn in last month, on a collision course with the SCAF that ruled the country after Hosni Mubarak was ousted by a popular uprising last year.

Morsi's decree also stipulates the organisation of new parliamentary elections two months after the approval by referendum of the country's new constitution and the adoption of a new law regulating parliament.

The presidential decision was likely to heighten tensions with the military, although both Morsi and Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi who heads SCAF appeared together at a military cadet graduation ceremony on Monday.

The SCAF had convened an urgent meeting "to discuss the presidential measures" state television said.

The High Judicial Council and the Constitutional Court were also meeting on Monday to discuss the constitutionality of Morsi's decision.

"Morsi says to SCAF: Check mate," read the headline of the independent daily Al-Watan, as Al-Tahrir, another daily, declared "Morsi defeats SCAF."

The move, described by some papers as a "political earthquake," has also put Morsi on a collision course with the country's judiciary and some secular parties.

"In any decent and democratic country, a president cannot disrespect the judiciary," said Rifaat al-Said, the head of the leftist Al-Tagammu party.

"Whether Morsi likes it or not, he must respect the judiciary's decisions," he told state television.

Said said a march to parliament would be organised later on Monday, and stressed that "several parties will boycott parliament's sessions."

The military dissolved parliament last month after Egypt's top court made its controversial ruling, a day before the second round of the presidential poll that saw the Islamist Morsi become Egypt's first democratically elected head of state.

The powerful Muslim Brotherhood, from which Morsi stood down after his election, at the time described the move as a "soft coup," accusing the military of seeking to monopolise power and demanding a referendum.

The Supreme Constitutional Court had said certain articles in the law governing parliamentary elections were invalid, annulling the Islamist-led house.

It also ruled as unconstitutional the political isolation law, which sought to bar senior members of Mubarak's regime and top members of his now-dissolved party from running for public office for 10 years.

Morsi beat Ahmed Shafiq -- Mubarak's last prime minister -- in the presidential election.

The SCAF issued a constitutional declaration granting the military sweeping powers and in the absence of a parliament -- in which nearly half of the seats had been won by the Muslim Brotherhood and another quarter by hardline Salafists -- it assumed legislative power.

SCAF's document, which rendered the president's post toothless, had caused outrage among those calling for the military to return to their barracks.

Instead of being sworn in before parliament, the 60-year-old Morsi took the oath on June 30 before the constitutional court.

US President Barack Obama will meet Egypt's new president at the UN General Assembly in New York in September, an official in Washington told AFP on Sunday.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who is to visit Cairo on July 14, has congratulated Morsi on his election but cautioned that his victory was just a first step towards true democracy.

Clinton's deputy, Bill Burns, was in Cairo on Sunday on the last day of a three-day visit for a wide range of meetings.

Despite Morsi's Islamist background, the confirmation of his election brought relief to Obama's administration, which feared that the military would not accept his victory and provoke new chaos in Egypt.

Morsi put Washington further at ease shortly after his victory announcement when he pledged to be a leader for all Egypt, where around 10 percent of the population is Christian, and to honour the country's 1979 peace treaty with Israel. AGENCIES

 
 
Watch SAMAA TV Live
Egypt signs $1 bln deal for food, energy
Egypt's new president faces burden of expectation
Obama invites Egypt president to US
President Morsi overturns dissolution of parliament
Morsi defies Egypt military by recalling parliament
England beat South Africa by seven wickets - Champions Trophy
Practical initiatives must be taken to curb power cuts, instructs LHC
Ruling parties agree to form smaller cabinet in Balochistan
Afghan government to shun U.S. talks with Taliban
Acer sees tablet, notebook PC shipments to be flat in second quarter
 
 
 
Post Your Comments
Note: SAMAA TV values your opinions and encourages you to add a comment to this discussion. Please don't be offended if we edit and/or remove questionable, off topic comments; SAMAA TV is not responsible for user comments.
Name:
 
Email:
 
 Leave a Comment:
 
Security Code:
 
 
User Comments
No comment(s) found.
 
     
SAMAA TV
UPDATES WITH
follow us on facebook
follow us on twitter
follow us on youtube
isamaa
subscribe for samaa email news alerts
samaa sms alert
samaa rss