Egypt army to intervene if people's demands not met in 48 hours

CAIRO: The Egyptian army warned on Monday that if Islamist President Mohamed Morsi failed to meet the demands of the people within 48 hours, it would intervene with a roadmap of its own, after...

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AFP
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Egypt army to intervene if people's demands not met in 48 hours
CAIRO: The Egyptian army warned on Monday that if Islamist President Mohamed Morsi failed to meet the demands of the people within 48 hours, it would intervene with a roadmap of its own, after millions took to the streets to demand he step down.

The military's statement, read out on state television, received a rapturous welcome from Morsi's opponents who have been camped out in Cairo's Tahrir Square and a muted response from his Islamist supporters.

The army high command renewed its call "that the demands of the people be met and gives (all parties) 48 hours, as a last chance, to take responsibility for the historic circumstances the country is going through."

"If the demands of the people are not met in this period... (the armed forces) will announce a future roadmap and measures to oversee its implementation," the statement said.

The Muslim Brotherhood, on whose platform Morsi won Egypt's first freely contested presidential election in June last year, said it was "studying" the army's statement.

Senior Brotherhood leader Mahmud Ghozlan told AFP that the group's political bureau would meet later to decide its position.

Tamarod, the grassroots campaign behind Sunday's massive protests, welcomed the statement by the armed forces which it said had "sided with the people."

It "will mean early presidential elections," Tamarod's spokesman Mahmud Badr told reporters. Tens of thousands of jubilant protesters poured into the streets of Cairo, Alexandria and other large cities after the statement was broadcast. Raucous cheers rang out across main squares.

In Tahrir, protesters voiced their support for army chief and Defence Minister General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, chanting: "Come down Sisi, Morsi is not my president."

Analyst Hassan Nafea, a political science professor at Cairo University, said the ultimatum was a clear demand for the the Islamist president to step aside to pave the way for fresh elections.

"He has been given 48 hours to accept what the people want and there is only one demand and that is to hold early presidential elections," Nafea said.

The army, which led a tumultuous transition after the 2011 revolt that ousted veteran president Hosni Mubarak, had given all parties one week to reconcile their differences. "This week, there has been no sign of gestures or acts," the army said.

"Wasting more time will lead only to more division... which we have warned and continue to warn against." Egypt has been deeply divided between Morsi's Islamist supporters and a broad-based opposition.

The huge turnout for Sunday's protests, which the military put at millions nationwide, handed the initiative to the opposition Tamarod movement, which gave Morsi until 5:00 pm (1500 GMT) on Tuesday to quit or face an open-ended campaign of civil disobedience.