Katika kile kinachoonekana kama njia ya kumfanya jenerali Al-Sisi kugombea urais wa nchi hiyo ya kiarabu yenye watu wengi zaidi, serikali mjini Cairo imejiuzulu. Field Marshall A-Sisi pia alijiuzulu ukuu wa majeshi hapo nyuma alikuwa anashikilia uwaziri wa ulinzi asingeweza kutangaza nia hiyo akiwa katika uongozi. Kuvunjika kwa utawala huu unampa Al-Sisi nafasi ya kutangaza nia yake ya kuwania urais wa nchi hiyo kubwa na yenye kushika turufu ya amani kati ya Israel na nchi za kiarabu. Uchaguzi wa Urais unatarajiwa kufanyika ndani ya miezi michache ijayo.
CAIRO (Reuters)
- Egypt's government resigned on Monday, paving the way for army chief
Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to declare his candidacy for
president of a strategic U.S. ally gripped by political strife.
After
the July overthrow of elected Islamist President Mohamed Mursi and
subsequent crackdown on Islamists and liberals with hundreds killed and
thousands jailed, critics say Cairo's military-backed authorities are
turning the clock back to the era of autocrat Hosni Mubarak era, when
the political elite ruled with an iron fist in alliance with top
businessmen.
"(The outgoing government) made every effort to get
Egypt out of the narrow tunnel in terms of security, economic pressures
and political confusion," Prime Minister Hazem el-Beblawi said in a live
nationwide speech.
Beblawi,
who was tasked by interim President Adly Mansour with running the
government's affairs until the election, did not give a clear reason for
the decision.
But it
effectively opened the way for Sisi to run for president since he would
first have to leave his post as defence minister in any case. "This
(government resignation) was done as a step that was needed ahead of
Sisi's announcement that he will run for president," an Egyptian
official said.
He told Reuters that the cabinet had resigned en masse as Sisi did not want to appear to be acting alone.
Government
spokesman Hany Salah said only: "This government feels that it did what
it had to do in this critical period, and maybe it's time for a
change."
Sisi has unveiled a
political roadmap meant to lead to elections after toppling Mursi of the
Muslim Brotherhood following mass unrest against his increasingly
arbitrary rule.
But promises of democracy
have not borne fruit in the biggest Arab nation, where hundreds of
thousands of people gathered in 2011 in an army-backed uprising that
overthrew Mubarak and raised hopes of a new political landscape.
The
presidential vote is expected within months in Egypt, which has great
geo-strategic importance due to its peace treaty with Israel and control
over the Suez Canal, a vital global shipping lane and the shortest
between Asia and Europe.
ZEROING IN ON THE BROTHERHOOD
Egypt's
stock market rose 0.26 percent after news of the government's departure
to 8029.37 points, reversing losses from earlier in the day.
Mursi's
removal touched off the bloodiest political crisis in modern Egyptian
history, with security forces killing hundreds of Brotherhood
supporters, jailing thousands and putting top leaders on trial.
The
Muslim Brotherhood accused Sisi of plotting a coup to restore
military-dominated government, and human rights groups say that abuses
are spreading by the day, allegations the army-backed government denies.
Housing
Minister Ibrahim Mahlab, a former official in Mubarak's National
Democratic Party, was expected to be named prime minister of the new
government, said a security source.
The
Egyptian authorities are likely to remain preoccupied with efforts to
further weaken and isolate the Muslim Brotherhood and fight a
mushrooming Islamist insurgency.
The
government has also clamped down on some secular activists who were
instrumental in the popular uprising that deposed Mubarak, and who
supported Mursi's removal. They are now languishing in prisons and face
trial.
Compounding the
instability, Islamist militants based in the widely lawless Sinai
Peninsula have intensified attacks on police and soldiers, killing
hundreds since Mursi's fall.
The
Sinai-based group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis claimed responsibility for a
suicide bombing which killed two South Koreans last week, inflicting yet
more harm on a tourism industry gutted by political turmoil and
protests.
Ansar also said that it was behind assassinations of army and Interior Ministry officials.
A
security source said Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim, who has been
spearheading the campaign to crush the Brotherhood, was expected to
retain his post in the hope he could provide tight security before
elections. He survived an assassination attempt by a suicide bomber last
year.
The Gulf Arab states of
Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Kuwait, deeply suspicious of the
Muslim Brotherhood, showered Egypt with billions of dollars in aid
after Mursi's political demise.
That
raised the morale of the government and filled state coffers. But any
new government will be under pressure to come up with long-term plans to
strengthen the tottering economy.
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