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Developereo
Not at all. Egypt's Constitution allows for impeachment proceedings.
Yes, but it can only be done by the House of the representatives. As I have said before democracy does not mean giving absolute power to a group of people for a 4 year term. Ultimately Democracy is
the rule of the people, representatives are there to represent and they draw their legitimacy from the people. If the majority of the people decide that those representatives use their power against the will of the people then it is the representatives who are in the wrong, not the people.
In effect the millions of Egyptians had no farther legal way to voice their concerns. A true democratic leader should have respected the millions of citizens on the streets and should have addressed them in some way, instead of ignoring them. Morsi may have been democratically elected, but he did not believe in democracy, the
rule of the people.
Article 152:
The President of the Republic is impeached for felony or high treason if at least a third of the members of the House of Representatives sponsor a motion of impeachment, and the House passes the motion with a two-thirds majority.
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Summarily deposing an elected official is a coup, no matter how you slice it. Some people are claiming that the military is going around arresting members of the MB. Sounds like the military has gotten into the business of deciding who can and cannot serve.
Yes, it is a coupe. It might have been done mostly by the military but it was supported by the people, you would probably agree that calling this a military coup is over simplistic and doesn't really represent the nature of what happened, or would you ignore about 15 mil citizens on the streets?
We already had a discussion over arrests/detentions. On this issue I prefer to wait and see what will follow. should they remain in custody towards the elections, or falsely charged I would agree. It is possible they were brought temporarily in as a mean to keep the backlash violence down, which is a whole different matter.
The military simply stayed out of it. Mubarak was not an elected official, so there was no concept of upholding democracy.
Not really,
The military junta, headed by effective head of state Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, announced on 13 February that the constitution would be suspended, both houses of parliament dissolved, and that the military would rule for six months until elections could be held.
Sounds familiar?
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Even assuming your numbers are correct -- and I doubt it simply because the protesters are pro-West, educated elite who are active on the internet and media
I am not 100% sure on the numbers too, though some sources have claimed up to 30 mil protesters, which is about 1/3 of the population so I was rather conservative.
Any sources that the protesters are all pro-west educated elite?
It seems that the protesters are from every part of the Egyptians society perhaps bar the very religious.