Cairo – Akram Ali
Egyptian politicians and scholars who translated the constitution
Cairo – Akram Ali
Just days before Egypt\'s presidential elections are due to start, and without the completion of the written constitution, a number of Egyptian politicians and scholars have proposed using foreign
constitutions that have been translated as a template for the anticipated Egyptian constitution. The National Council for Translation has translated 16 constitutions for review before undertaking the draft of the Egyptian version. Former vice president of the National Council for Human Rights Dr Ahmed Kamal Abul-Magd, member of parliament Dr Mustafa Shobky, law professor Dr Hossam Issa, and strategic expert Sameh Seif Alyazel supported this measure.
Former vice president of the National Council for Human Rights, Ahmed Kamal Abul-Magd, confirmed that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) \"is serious in its promise to hand over power on time, at the end of June,\" the deadline to transfer power to a civilian government.
In an exclusive statement to Arabstoday, Abul-Magd said that is was \"nonsense\' to expect the new constitution to be drafted in 15 days or even one month, saying that it could take two years to draft a consensual constitution that will be agreed upon by all the different sectors of Egyptian society.
Abul-Magd remarked that some politicians wished to exert influence on the majority of the voices without considering the best interests of the nation.
He asserted that Egypt could benefit from using foreign constitutions as its model in order to get out of the current impasse, noting that many countries have experienced similar crises.
MP Amr Shobky considered the current disorder in Egypt was caused by the constitutional amendments which took place last year, followed by the constitutional proclamation of the Military Council.
During a seminar organised by the National Council for Translation to examine constitutions from different parts of the world, Shobky believed that the 1971 constitution \"with all its defects\" would be better than the constitutional proclamation developed by the military council \"because it drove Egypt into a complicated crises which must be solved as soon as possible\" he warned.
Professor of law at Ain Shams University, Dr Hossam Issa believes that 75 percent of Egyptians do not know the meaning of the constitution and are unable to differentiate between the constitution and the law, citing this lack in political awareness which led to a disaster in the constitutional amendments that took place in March last year.
Issa called for the drafting of a consensual constitution after discussions with all political forces and parties with clear explanations to the Egyptian people before the referendum in order to \"avoid the tragedy of last year\'s constitutional amendments\" in which 70 percent of the people voted “yes” without knowing exactly what they were voting for.