ElBaradei sworn-in as Egypt’s vice president

ElBaradei sworn-in as Egypt’s vice president
Updated 17 July 2013
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ElBaradei sworn-in as Egypt’s vice president

ElBaradei sworn-in as Egypt’s vice president

CAIRO: Egyptian reform advocate Mohammed ElBaradei, who led the country’s main opposition group in criticism of the Muslim Brotherhood, was sworn-in Sunday as the country’s interim vice president.
The 71-year-old former diplomat and Nobel laureate emerged as a prominent democracy advocate and later as the head of the National Salvation Front, a secular coalition of groups opposed to former President Muhammad Mursi.
According to NSF spokesman Khaled Dawoud, ElBaradei no longer heads the coalition.
“He is now a vice president for all Egyptians,” Dawoud said.
Egypt’s interim President Adly Mansour oversaw the swearing in of ElBaradei, the latest move by the country’s new leadership to push ahead with a transition plan following the military’s ouster of Mursi nearly two weeks ago.
Thousands of Mursi’s supporters, though, have vowed to continue their sit-in in Cairo until he is reinstated. They have refused to accept his ouster or the military-backed timeline for transition, which calls for changes to the constitution and new elections for parliament and president.
ElBaradei’s NSF group under Mursi was among the president’s strongest critics. The coalition stood with Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi as he announced Mursi’s ouster amid massive protests against his rule.
The former Egyptian diplomat to the United Nations is known internationally for his 12 years of work as head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, for which he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005.