Latest News:  

English>>World

Egypt's opposition front presses Morsi for early presidential election

(Xinhua)

08:20, June 28, 2013

CAIRO, June 27 (Xinhua) -- Egypt's main opposition bloc, the National Salvation Front (NSF), on Thursday evening urged President Mohamed Morsi to hold an early presidential election.

The front urged Morsi "to listen to the voices of the opposition and respond to their demands by holding early presidential election to meet the objectives of 2011 revolution topped by social justice," according to a statement.

"We are confident that millions of Egyptians will flock to the main fields in peaceful protests on June 30 to assert their will and bring their revolution back to its right track," the statement said.

Activists and opposition groups have been preparing for massive anti-Morsi demonstrations on June 30, the first anniversary of the rule of Morsi, to ask the president to leave.

The NSF supports the public demand of returning to the boxes again in running the presidential and parliamentary elections after a transitional period, when a strong government is formed to target the economic, security and social justice problems.

The statement said an interim government will be tasked with redrafting the constitution, issuing laws and running national reconciliation that includes all social factions.

According to the statement, the NSF opposes any dialogue with Morsi.

Commenting on Morsi's speech delivered on Wednesday, Amro Moussa, a leading member of the NSF, said the president "doesn't take the opposition seriously."

The speech did not take into consideration the millions of signatures collected to push for an early election and did not give a roadmap for reform, Moussa said.

Ahead of the June 30 protests, Morsi also offered on Wednesday to form an independent committee to amend the constitution, with the participation of all political forces and parties, and a higher committee in charge of national reconciliation. However, his words were deemed by many as "superficial" and aimed at trivializing problems.

We Recommend:

U.S. presidents and their pets

Highlights of 50th Int'l Paris Air Show

Best photos of week (June 17 - June 23)

Venezuelan Army School boat visits Cuba

Afghan refugees at UNHCR registration center

Beauty contest held in Budapest, Hungary

Angelina Jolie visits refugee camp

'Super moon' hangs in the sky over Rotterdam

LA' Chinatown sets up statue of Bruce Lee

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:LiangJun、Yao Chun)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Special operation members in training

  2. People present wishes to Mandela

  3. Rescue operations resume in India

  4. A university graduate's shepherd career

  5. Father Chen and his 2,000 children

  6. Photos: Hazy life in Beijing

  7. Most beautiful bodies in the world

  8. Are they still beautiful without bang?

  9. Chinese shares extend losses

  10. Setting sail into uncharted waters

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Chinese central bank's caution amid cash crunch will pay off in long run
  2. No pains, no gains for China's economy
  3. 'Kingdom of Bicycles' rises again
  4. Prism program – who are the principal victims?
  5. Stocks hold steady, but brokers still cautious

What’s happening in China

Dance becomes popular stress relief

  1. 630 investigated in China audits
  2. Nearly 943 mln USD embezzled from China's affordable housing project
  3. China's civil servants top 7 mln
  4. Teens learn looks count
  5. Woman, 68, washes dishes for grandson's college