By Yasmine Saleh and Marwa Awad | Reuters – 7 hrs ago
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's army chief will host national unity talks on Wednesday, seeking to end a growing political and economic crisis in the Arab world's most populous nation.
The meeting scheduled for 1430 GMT was called in response to a wave of protests since President Mohamed Mursi awarded himself sweeping powers on November 22 to push through a new constitution shaped by his Islamist allies, which is due to go to a referendum on Saturday.
"We will not speak
about politics nor about the referendum. Tomorrow we will sit together
as Egyptians," armed forces chief and Defense Minister Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi said at a gathering of army and police officials on Tuesday.
Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood,
which propelled him to power in a June election, were expected to
attend, while the main opposition coalition said it would decide on
Wednesday morning whether to participate. The opposition stayed away
from an earlier reconciliation meeting called by Mursi last weekend.
The judiciary committee overseeing the vote decided
late on Tuesday that the referendum would be conducted on two days
instead of one, as previously planned.
"The committee had
officially asked the President to issue a law approving that the
referendum takes place on two stages on Saturday December 15 and
Saturday December 22," Judge Mahmoud Abu Shousha, a member of the
referendum judiciary committee, said. Voting for Egyptians living abroad
starts on Wednesday.
"The reason for the
splitting of the vote into two stages is due to a shortage of judges
needed to supervise the ballot stations," another member of the
committee, who asked not to be named, said.
Many judges had
decided in a joint meeting on Tuesday to not supervise the vote on a
constitution they say had divided the country into two groups.
Outside the presidential palace - where anti-Mursi
protesters are demanding the Islamist postpone the vote on a
constitution they say does not represent all Egyptians - there was
skepticism tinged with some hope."Talks without the cancellation of the referendum - and a change to the constitution to make it a constitution for all Egyptians and not the Brotherhood - will lead to nothing and will be no more than a media show," said Ahmed Hamdy, a 35-year-old office worker.
But the fact that
the army was calling such talks "is an indication to all parties that
the crisis is coming to a head and that they need to end it quickly", he
said.
Earlier, Finance
Minister Mumtaz al-Said disclosed that a $4.8 billion International
Monetary Fund loan, a cornerstone of Egypt's economic recovery hopes,
would be delayed until next month because of the crisis.
The delay was
intended to allow time to explain a widely criticized package of
economic austerity measures to the Egyptian people, Said told Reuters.
REBUILD CONSENSUS
Prime Minister
Hisham Kandil said the measures would not hurt the poor. Bread, sugar
and rice would not be touched, but prices of cigarettes and cooking oil
would go up and fines would be imposed for public littering. In a bid to
rebuild consensus, he said there would be a public consultation about
the program next week.
In Washington, the
IMF said Egypt had asked for the loan to be postponed "in light of the
unfolding developments on the ground". The Fund stood ready to consult
with Egypt on resuming discussions on the stand-by loan, a spokeswoman
said.
On the streets of
Cairo, thousands of opposition supporters gathered outside the
presidential palace to demand that Mursi postpone Saturday's referendum.
A bigger crowd of
flag-waving Islamist Mursi backers, who want the vote to go ahead as
planned on Saturday, assembled at two mosques and remained on the
streets as night fell over the Egyptian capital. There were also
protests in Alexandria and other cities.
The extended
upheaval following the fall of Hosni Mubarak last year is causing
concern in the United States, which has given Cairo billions of dollars
in military and other aid since Egypt made peace with Israel in 1979.
State Department
spokeswoman Victoria Nuland emphasized "deep concerns" over the
situation in Egypt and repeated calls on protesters to demonstrate
peacefully and on security forces to act with restraint. She declined to
be drawn on whether Washington believed the referendum should be
postponed.
The latest unrest
has so far claimed seven lives in clashes between the Islamist Muslim
Brotherhood and the opposition. But the Republican Guard has yet to use
force to keep protesters away from the presidential palace, now ringed
with tanks, barbed wire and concrete barricades.
(Additional
reporting by Tamim Elyan and Edmund Blair in Cairo, and Andrew Quinn in
Washington; Writing by Giles Elgood; Editing by Michael Roddy)
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