Moussa ups poll boycott threat

Moussa ups poll boycott threat
Updated 15 March 2013
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Moussa ups poll boycott threat

Moussa ups poll boycott threat

CAIRO: The Egyptian opposition is more determined than ever to boycott parliamentary elections after President Muhammad Mursi challenged a court decision delaying the polls, former Arab League chief Amr Moussa said yesterday.
In an interview with AFP, Moussa said there had been no “serious talks” with the president on the opposition’s core demand for a government of national unity despite the impact of the political deadlock on Egypt’s faltering economy.
The opposition has come under strong US pressure to take part in the elections, which had been scheduled for next month, and Moussa said it might have done so had the president accepted the delay ordered by the court.
“We would have gained some time to talk about the points we are raising, and to give the government time to reconsider,” he said. The president’s appeal “does reverse the situation,” he said, “bringing it back to the tension around the election.”
Mursi lodged the appeal on Wednesday against the March 6 court order canceling his calling of the election, arguing he had acted within his sovereign powers when he set the timetable. The court has yet to give its ruling.
Moussa heads the National Salvation Front along with former UN nuclear watchdog chief Mohamed ElBaradei and leftist Hamdeen Sabbahi, who like Moussa ran against Mursi for the presidency last June.
The opposition bloc is demanding a national unity government ahead of any vote. Mursi insists it is for the new Parliament to choose a new administration.
“There has to be a unity government to face the situation, and take responsibility — collective responsibility, national responsibility,” Moussa said of the country’s teetering economy.
“This is the result of anger and frustration and the absence of the government itself,” Moussa said.
“There is nothing for those people, young or old, to say: ‘ah, now there is a good line of policy, let us see.’ There is nothing of that kind,” Moussa said, speaking in English.
“What I hear from people is... there is nothing that has changed. People say that is exactly what the revolution is about — the poverty situation, the services situation.”
Mursi has faced persistent unrest in several cities. Clashes between protesters and police regularly closed down a major Cairo thoroughfare near Tahrir Square.