Military cannot arrest civilians: Egypt court

Military cannot arrest civilians: Egypt court
Updated 27 June 2012
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Military cannot arrest civilians: Egypt court

Military cannot arrest civilians: Egypt court

CAIRO: Egypt’s administrative court suspended yesterday a Justice Ministry decision to allow the ruling military powers to arrest civilians, a judicial source said.
The court took the decision after reviewing an appeal filed by 17 rights groups against the controversial decree passed on June 13.
“The decision creates extraordinary powers that have no basis in law,” the groups had said in a statement, describing the order as “a blatant circumvention of the official end of the state of emergency.”
“The decision could put in place far worse restrictions than those of the state of emergency,” the statement said. The military has said the decree was necessary after the end of a decades-long state of emergency while the army remained on the streets. The decision infuriated activists and protesters, who have campaigned for years for an end to the state of emergency, which granted police wide powers of arrest and was often used to curb dissent.
Ousted President Hosni Mubarak had called in the army during an uprising last year in which protesters torched police stations. The military is scheduled to hand power to president-elect Muhammad Mursi on June 30. The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights watchdog welcomed the court decision, saying the decree had allowed the military the right to arrest people for “resisting the rulers and insulting them.”
“The groups that filed the appeal believed that many of the crimes mentioned in the decree are included in the right of Egyptians to peacefully express political views opposing the regime,” it said in a statement.