A.Rafay
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2012
- Messages
- 11,400
- Reaction score
- 10
- Country
- Location
CAIRO: More than 1,000 religious people rallied in Cairo on Friday and called for the implementation of sharia Islamic law, highlighting divisions in society as rival factions jostle to shape the new Egypt.
Liberals have locked horns over the role of Islam with religious people who dominate a 100-strong assembly that is drawing up a new constitution, which must be approved in a referendum before a new parliamentary election can be held. Islamiya, Islamiya, the protesters chanted in Cairos Tahrir Square, the centre of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak who spent 30 years keeping a tight lid on religious groups.
The turnout at Fridays demonstration was smaller than had been expected after some of the main groups that espouse the ultraconservative Salafi school of Islamic thinking backed out. Some groups said they would demonstrate next Friday. The Muslim Brotherhood, which propelled President Mohammad Morsi to power earlier this year and which takes a less conservative approach, was also not involved in the protest. Unlike many of the rallies since the fall of Mubarak that have packed the square, Fridays numbers were modest and traffic flowed with relative ease even as the demonstration went on. No to liberalism, no to secularism, I dont want anything other than sharia, the protesters also chanted, some waving black flags emblazoned with Islamic slogans. Drafts of the constitution drawn up by the assembly so far indicate it will have more Islamic references than the previous constitution, worrying more liberal-minded Egyptians and Christians, who make up about a tenth of the nation of 83 million. reuters
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
Liberals have locked horns over the role of Islam with religious people who dominate a 100-strong assembly that is drawing up a new constitution, which must be approved in a referendum before a new parliamentary election can be held. Islamiya, Islamiya, the protesters chanted in Cairos Tahrir Square, the centre of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak who spent 30 years keeping a tight lid on religious groups.
The turnout at Fridays demonstration was smaller than had been expected after some of the main groups that espouse the ultraconservative Salafi school of Islamic thinking backed out. Some groups said they would demonstrate next Friday. The Muslim Brotherhood, which propelled President Mohammad Morsi to power earlier this year and which takes a less conservative approach, was also not involved in the protest. Unlike many of the rallies since the fall of Mubarak that have packed the square, Fridays numbers were modest and traffic flowed with relative ease even as the demonstration went on. No to liberalism, no to secularism, I dont want anything other than sharia, the protesters also chanted, some waving black flags emblazoned with Islamic slogans. Drafts of the constitution drawn up by the assembly so far indicate it will have more Islamic references than the previous constitution, worrying more liberal-minded Egyptians and Christians, who make up about a tenth of the nation of 83 million. reuters
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan