• 03:31
  • Wednesday ,19 June 2013
العربية

Does the end of June marks the end?

Nader Fawzi

Article Of The Day

00:06

Wednesday ,19 June 2013

Does the end of June marks the end?
However many people think that June 30 will bring the end of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, I don't think so. I believe it may only be the beginning. 
 
The biggest question the Egyptians have to answer now is: Who can govern Egypt in case president Morsy and the Muslim Brotherhood are overthrown? 
 
Unfortunately, there is no respectful leader who can unify the Egyptians to be found after 30 months had passed. None of 90 million Egyptian citizens to lead the people, even if most of the Egyptians agree that Morsy is not good enough to be a president. 
 
Moreover, the Muslim Brotherhood has lost many of its supporters including the ultra conservative Islamists: the Salafis. Furthermore, America has turned against them after they failed to achieve the promised democracy in Egypt. Some people say that America had decided to support the Islamists in the Arab countries in order to get rid of them. If so, she has achieved great success.
 
Moreover, the Muslim Brotherhood has lost two of its biggest supporters in the Middle East, which is Qatar, whose new governor doesn't care much about the Islamic project, and Turkey, where Erdogan is also on the verge of falling.   
 
We suffered many problems as the revolution of January 25 had no leader, and now we are going to repeat the same mistake in our new revolution.
 
Rescue Front only proved its failure in everything, and did not provide the alternative. Therefore, the Egyptians started to think about the Army governing the country once again. At the same time, the Army doesn't welcome this idea after it suffered during the transitional period when they were in power.
 
Toppling the government is only the beginning and we'll have to dissolve the constitution as well as the Shura Council, then to form a presidential council of three people including the Defense Minister. They will have to draft a new constitution and supervise a new presidential and parliamentary elections with Affirmative action for the Copts, women and other minorities. 
 
We don't know what will happen on June 30, but we do hope it would be the beginning of true change in Egypt.