Salafists battle for a religious state in Egypt
The Constituent Assembly has gone a long way in writing Egypts new constitution, but several contentious issues remain on the table
Gamal Essam El-Din
Thursday 12 Jul 2012
Ultraconservative Salafists have stepped up efforts aimed at imposing their radical brand of Islam on Egypt's new constitution. The two Salafist parties, El-Nour Party and Asala, have exploited their membership of the Constituent Assembly tasked with drafting a new constitution to battle hard to change the first three articles of 1971 constitution. They were successful with the first article, but lost with the second and third articles under pressure of the prestigious and moderate Sunni Islam Al-Azhar institution and liberal forces.
On Article 1, the assemblys Basic Components Committee approved the request of Salafists to add the word consultative (a literal translation of the Islamic word "shura" to the article. Mohamed Emara, an Islamist thinker and chairman of the committee, said the article now reads: The Arab Republic of Egypt is democratic, consultative, constitutional and modernised; based on the separation of powers and the principle of citizenship. It adds that, Egypt is part of the Arab and Islamic nation, with strong ties to the African Continent.
This differs from the text of the 1971 constitution where Article 1 states that "The Arab Republic of Egypt is a democratic state based on citizenship. The Egyptian people are part of the Arab nation and work for the realisation of its comprehensive unity.
The addition of the word consultative or (shura" , said Emara, was proposed by the Salafist El-Nour Party because the word shura is contained in the Quran, the holy book of Muslims. Shura means democratic in the sense that rulers should listen to representatives of the nation and always keep in consultation with them before deciding on major issues, said Emara.
http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/1/64/47554/Egypt/Politics-/Salafists-battle-for-a-religious-state-in-Egypt.aspx