CAIRO: Egyptian President Muhammad Mursi’s hard-line Islamist allies in Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya want him to call early presidential elections to avoid bloodshed and a military coup, a senior member of the group told Reuters.
The Gamaa Islamiya, once an armed group that is one of Mursi’s few remaining allies, had been advising the head of state to call early presidential elections in the two days since the army issued a deadline for politicians to resolve the political conflict by Wednesday.
“This peaceful, constitutional transfer (of power) will spare blood,” Tarek Al-Zumar told Reuters by telephone, adding that it would also protect the constitution that was passed into law in December.
He said the army’s statement appeared to presage a coup, but this “can be avoided if the president decides to hold a referendum on early presidential elections.”
Egypt’s army commander and Islamist President Mohamed Mursi each pledged his life to defy the other as the hour approached on Wednesday that will trigger a military takeover that was prompted by mass demonstrations.
The military chiefs issued a call to battle in a statement headlined “The Final Hours.” They said they were willing to shed blood against “terrorists and fools” after Mursi refused to give up his elected office. Mursi said, “The price ... is my life.”
As a mass of revellers on Cairo’s Tahrir Square feted the army for saving the revolutionary democracy won there two years ago, supporters of the president’s Muslim Brotherhood denounced a “military coup.” Some clashed with security forces at Cairo University, where 16 people died and about 200 were wounded.
Military sources told Reuters the army had drafted a plan to sideline Mursi and suspend the constitution after a 5 p.m. (1500 GMT) deadline passes. Coordinated with political leaders, an interim council would rule pending new elections. The sources would not say what was planned for an uncooperative president.
Facing the expiry of a 48-hour ultimatum set by the head of the armed forces that he should agree a power-sharing deal with his rivals, Mursi broadcast a defiant, if somewhat rambling, address to the nation to defend his “legitimacy” — a word he used repeatedly in the course of 45 minutes.
Liberal opposition leaders, who have vowed not to negotiate with Mursi since the ultimatum was issued, immediately denounced his refusal to go as a declaration of “civil war.” The youth movement that organized the mass protests urged the Republican Guard to arrest Mursi immediately and present him for trial.
Three hours after his midnight television appearance, the military high command responded with a post on its Facebook page. The post said they, too, were willing to lay down their lives to defend their position — one which they described as defending the Egyptian people from “terrorists, radicals and fools.”
A military source said the message came from General Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, the armed forces commander appointed by Mursi last year, who issued the ultimatum to politicians on Monday.
It was posted on the official Facebook page of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, or SCAF. It entered history books as Egypt’s ruling institution after the army pushed aside Hosni Mubarak in the Arab Spring uprising of early 2011.
“It is an honor for us to die rather than that anyone should terrorize or threaten the Egyptian people,” it said. “We swear to God, we will sacrifice even our blood for Egypt and its people to defend them against any terrorist, radical or fool.
“Long live Egypt and its people.”
Protests
The army has taken its cue from the millions who rallied on Sunday to call for Mursi’s resignation as he completed a year in office. It appears to have only enhanced the high regard in which the military is held by most Egyptians by its action.
But as well as listening to the voice of protesters, the army also appears to have had its own concerns about the way Mursi was leading the country — notably about his alliances with more radical Islamist groups and recent association with sectarian calls to holy war in Syria.
The opposition say offers by Mursi to include them have been made in bad faith by a leader beholden to a religious movement intent on entrenching its power and Islamic ideas forever. The Brotherhood calls them bad losers who do not grasp democracy.
Sisi, a 2006 graduate of the US Army War College, has insisted he is not seeking power in the long term. Many believe the armed forces — with their extensive economic interests and generous funding — when they say they have no political ambition.
The United States has urged compromise. It has funded the army for decades, since long before the fall of Mubarak in 2011, as a key part of helping secure Washington’s ally Israel. Mursi aides have said they believe a coup would need US support.
Washington has also defended the legitimacy of Mursi’s election to lead the biggest Arab nation, as part of a strategy of promoting democracy in the Middle East since the Arab Spring.
President Barack Obama told Mursi by telephone that talks with opponents were needed. Mursi said on Twitter that he would not be “dictated to internally or internationally.”
A senior European diplomat said world powers would have no choice but to condemn the military removal of an elected head of state, even if the generals have support on the streets.
In his television address, Mursi warned that any deviation from the democratic order approved in a series of votes last year would lead Egypt down a dangerous path.
It was unclear who fired at whom or who started the violence at Cairo University. Muslim Brotherhood supporters angrily held up rifle and shotgun cartridges after scenes of mayhem, shrouded in teargas. State television quoted a health ministry official as saying 16 people died and about 200 were hurt.
That made it by some way the bloodiest incident in several weeks of street fighting. Eight people were killed the previous day during a siege of the Brotherhood’s national headquarters and the movement has said it is under attack from hired “thugs” left over from the days of Mubarak’s secret police.
Mursi defiant
“The price of preserving legitimacy is my life,” Mursi said in an impassioned, repetitive address to the camera. “Legitimacy is the only guarantee to preserve the country.”
In a warning aimed as much at his own militant supporters as at the army, he said: “We do not declare jihad (holy war) against each other. We only wage jihad on our enemies.”
Urging Egyptians not to heed the siren calls of what he called remnants of the former authoritarian government, the “deep state” and the corrupt, he said: “Don’t be fooled. Don’t fall into the trap. Don’t let them steal your revolution.”
Condemning a coup against their first freely elected leader, tens of thousands of Muslim Brotherhood supporters took to the streets, clashing with opponents in several towns.
But they were dwarfed by anti-government protesters who turned out in the hundreds of thousands across the nation.
“Mursi — Game Over — Out,” proclaimed a laser display beamed over Tahrir Square, where people danced with joy, recalling the euphoria and the slogans that greeted the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak. The light show counted the hours to 5 p.m.
Despite his fighting talk, time appears to have all but run out for Mursi. Ministers have resigned and aides abandoned him.
Military sources told Reuters that, assuming the politicians fail to end a year of deadlock before the deadline, the generals have their own draft program ready — although it could be fine-tuned in consultation with willing political parties.
Under the road map, the military would install an interim council, composed mainly of civilians from different political groups and experienced technocrats, to run the country until an amended constitution was drafted within months.
That would be followed by a new presidential election, but parliamentary polls would be delayed until strict conditions