Thursday, November 29, 2012

NBC News' Ayman Mohyeldin on Egypt unrest

Protesters are back in Tahrir Square. They fear the interim military government is trying to retain its grip on power ahead of parliamentary elections planned to begin next week. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

NBC News's Ayman Mohyeldin discussed the current unrest in Egypt from Cairo on Wednesday with contributors on the ground.

Watch the entire conversation below:

NBC News Mideast Correspondent Ayman Mohyeldin discusses recent clashes between Egyptian activists and police with citizen journalists Yasmin Ellayat and Sherief Gaber.

In an escalation of the tug-of-war between Egypt's president and the powerful judiciary, judges in the country's top courts went on strike Wednesday to protest Mohammed Morsi's seizure of near absolute powers, while Islamists rushed to complete a new constitution, the issue at the heart of the dispute.

The moves came a day after at least 200,000 protesters filled Cairo's central Tahrir Square to denounce the decrees Morsi issued last week, which place him above oversight of any kind, including by the courts.

Threatening to turn the dispute into violent street clashes, Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood and the more radical Islamist Salafi Al-Nour party, called for a counter-demonstration this weekend in Tahrir Square, where Morsi's opponents have been holding a sit-in for over a week.

Morsi says the decrees are necessary to protect the "revolution" that helped drive Hosni Mubarak from office last year as well as the nation's transition to democratic rule. The constitutional declaration also provides the 100-member panel drafting a new constitution with immunity from the courts.

The Associated Press.

Related:

Demonstrators clash with Egyptian police in Tahrir Square over Morsi's 'dictatorial powers'

Tensions rise in Egypt's Tahrir Square as protests build

Protesters in Tahrir Square hold funeral for activist killed in clashes

'Get out!' Egypt protesters demand downfall of Morsi regime

Egypt's liberals and Islamists clash in violent protests

Khalil Hamra / AP

Egyptian protesters clash with security forces near Tahrir square, in Cairo, Egypt, on Nov. 28. Egyptian state television says the country's highest appeal court has decided to suspend its work nationwide to protest the president's decrees giving himself nearly absolute powers.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/28/15517463-nbc-news-ayman-mohyeldin-discusses-the-current-unrest-in-egypt?lite

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