The made up number is intended to
justify the army's actions. Lets get this clear - regardless of how one feels
about Morsy and Moslem Brotherhood and their policies, one must look at the
bigger picture.
According to Asia News, reporting
from Egypt , the goal was for 15 million
signatures by June 30th. They gathered just over 7.5 million. But two days
earlier, June 28th, WAshington Post claimed they had reached 22 million - and
of course, it catches like wildfire
http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-06-28/world/40255650_1_cairo-supporters-tahrir-square
I hope more prominent news services
look into this and bring it to light. This military coup was stupidly called
"democratic coup" - what an oxymoron!
Here is the Asia News
article
http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Young-Egyptians-rekindle-revolution-by-collecting-more-than-7-million-signatures-against-the-Morsi-government-28063.html
05/30/2013
13:29
EGYPT
Young Egyptians rekindle revolution by collecting more than 7 million signatures against the Morsi government
Recall campaign aims for 15 million signatures by 30 June. Calling themselves "rebels", organisers see their initiative as an alternative to street demonstrations. Their move raises concerns in the Muslim Brotherhood.
Young Egyptians rekindle revolution by collecting more than 7 million signatures against the Morsi government
Recall campaign aims for 15 million signatures by 30 June. Calling themselves "rebels", organisers see their initiative as an alternative to street demonstrations. Their move raises concerns in the Muslim Brotherhood.
Organised by a "rebel" group, the campaign began on 1 May with the aim of 15 million signatures by 30 June, which marks the first anniversary since
In one month, movement promoters travelled the length and breadth of the country, collecting signatures door to door, on buses, in restaurants and offices as well as on the internet. Once completed, the petition will be handed over to Prosecutor General Talaat Abdullah.
Along with the collection of signatures, young people are also preparing a protest march of at least one million people that will march on 30 June from
"Whoever wants the revolution to prevail must rebel," said Mohamed Abdel-Aziz, one of the movement's organisers.
The young man calls for a new peaceful uprising demanding jobs, freedom and respect for justice, something that no longer exists in
"Let 30 June be a decisive day for the revolution," he added.
The success of the rebels' campaign scares the Egyptian president. According to national media, support for the Muslim Brotherhood leader dropped by at least 20 percentage points from the 50 per cent he won in the 2012 presidential election.
On 25 May, at a press conference during Morsi's visit to
"Some people say I barely got 52 percent of the vote in [last year's] presidential election," Morsi said, "but legally and constitutionally, I am the legitimate president."
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