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WAR REPORT
Egypt army on frontline of tough transition
by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) July 05, 2013


Egyptian soldier killed in Islamist militant attack: medics
Cairo (AFP) July 05 - An Egyptian soldier was killed early Friday in coordinated rocket and machinegun attacks by Islamist militants on army checkpoints and a police base in the restive Sinai, medics said.

The soldier was killed when the militants fired on an army checkpoint near the north Sinai village of al-Gura, medics said, adding two other soldiers were wounded in the attack.

Following president Mohamed Morsi's ouster by the military on Thursday, several militants have publicly threatened violence in retaliation

Militants attacked a police base with rockets and attacked military intelligence headquarters in the border town of Rafa, security sources said.

A security source said militants were attacking army and police checkpoints in several towns in north Sinai.

Hardcore Islamist militants have used the sparsely populated north of the peninsula as a launching pad for attacks on security forces and neighbouring Israel.

Morsi, elected in June 2012 and deposed on Wednesday after mass protests, had himself ordered a crackdown on Sinai militants after an August 2012 attack killed 16 soldiers.

No group claimed credit for that attack. But Sinai based militants have taken responsibility for rocket attacks and cross border attacks against Israel.

UN rights chief alarmed by Egypt arrests
Geneva (AFP) July 05 - UN human rights chief Navi Pillay Friday expressed alarm about reported mass arrests of key members of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood after the military ousted president Mohamed Morsi, and urged all sides to respect fundamental freedoms.

"There should be no more violence, no arbitrary detention, no illegal acts of retribution," Pillay said in a statement.

"Serious steps should also be taken to halt, and investigate, the appalling -- and at times seemingly organised -- sexual violence targeting women protestors," she added.

Pillay's spokesman Rupert Colville told reporters in Geneva that the basis of the detention of individuals including Morsi and other Muslim Brotherhood figures remained unclear.

"It's very important that the authorities address that issue," Colville said.

Pillay said that international human rights standards -- including freedom of speech and assembly -- must be upheld.

"I urge all parts of Egyptian society to exercise these rights in a peaceful manner, so as to avoid any further loss of life. I also urge a major effort by all political parties, and the authorities, to deter and punish any acts of vengeance," she said.

Pillay said that mass demonstrations by Morsi's supporters and his opponents over recent weeks were a clear sign that Egyptians across the political spectrum want their human rights to be honoured.

"The country has so far failed to seize the opportunity to respond to the aspirations of all its citizens and move towards a truly tolerant and inclusive society, based on human rights norms and the rule of law," she said.

"Egyptians deserve to live in a society run by institutions that ensure their rights are respected. I urge everyone to seize this new opportunity to fulfil the country's potential to become a fully functioning and prosperous democracy, without further destabilising upheavals," she added.

Islamist Morsi became Egypt's first democratically elected president in June 2012, after strongman Hosni Mubarak was driven from power, but was himself deposed on Wednesday after mass protests.

His supporters accuse the military of a brazen coup.

Pillay's office refrained from calling for Morsi's reinstatement or labelling his ouster a coup.

"It's very, very complex," said Colville. "We're calling clearly for a very quick return to the proper democratic process," he said, adding it was clear that the Muslim Brotherhood must remain part of Egypt's future political landscape.

With its popularly supported overthrow of president Mohamed Morsi, Egypt's army has placed itself at the forefront of a difficult transition fraught with the risks of confronting the Islamist's backers.

The military has announced a roadmap that includes the suspension of the constitution and appointment of the country's top judge Adly Mansour as interim president with a vague mandate ahead of new elections.

But it is military chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, also the defence minister appointed by Morsi, who will call the shots.

The armed forces had previously ruled the country, in between the Arab Spring uprising that toppled longtime strongman Hosni Mubarak in February 2011 and Morsi's election about 16 months later.

Back then, Mubarak's defence minister, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, headed the army in a tumultuous, violence-stricken transition that damaged the military's standing in society.

This time around, however, the generals have set out to avoid a repeat that pattern, which sapped both its popular support and its officers' morale, commentators say.

"I think the new military leaders do not want to make the SCAF's mistakes at the time," said political analyst Hala Mostafa, referring to the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.

"The main difference is that this time, there is popular support" for its roadmap, she said.

The military overthrew Morsi on Wednesday after millions of protesters rallied to demand the Islamist leader quit for failing the 2011 revolution and bolstering his Islamist base at the expense of the rest of the country.

General Sisi made a fine point of mustering opposition and religious leaders to appear beside him during his televised address on Wednesday night to announce Morsi's removal.

His plan has been backed by Mohamed ElBaradei, the former head of the UN nuclear watchdog, Coptic Christian Pope Tawadros II and the head of Al-Azhar, Sunni Islam's highest seat of learning.

But some still have their doubts given the experience of the military's handling of the post-Mubarak transition, during which opposition protests were quashed.

"Somehow Egyptians have magically forgotten the series of human rights violations that the army has conducted in the name of 'stability' and 'productivity' as well the many marches and protests that took place, calling for the army to return to its barracks," wrote columnist Thoraia Abou Bakr in the English-language Daily News Egypt newspaper.

"This time, it will be different," they tell me, "The army does not want to rule."

A military crackdown in which the top leadership of the Brotherhood has been rounded up may also prolong the climate of tension and violence that undermines Egypt and weighs heavily on the economy.

"The forceful removal of the nation's first democratically elected civilian president risks sending a message to Islamists that they have no place in the political order," said the International Crisis Group.

This, the Brussels-based ICG added, would sow "fears among them that they will suffer yet another bloody crackdown; and thus potentially prompting violent, even desperate resistance by Morsi's followers."

Morsi's ouster has been followed by a wave of arrests in the ranks of the Muslim Brotherhood, including that of influential Islamist movement's supreme leader, Mohammed Badie.

The deposed president, who launched a last-ditch appeal on Wednesday to denounce the "coup", was himself in military detention.

Since the fall of the monarchy in 1952, the army has held an important place in Egypt, although it has often preferred to act behind the scenes.

It provided Egypt with all of its presidents -- Mohammed Naguib, Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat, and Hosni Mubarak -- until the election of Morsi, a civil engineer by training.

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