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Egypt Ready to Tackle Potential Post-Election Clashes

© RIA Novosti . Alexandr ElistratovEgypt Ready to Tackle Potential Post-Election Clashes
Egypt Ready to Tackle Potential Post-Election Clashes - Sputnik International
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Egypt’s security forces have drawn up a plan on how to secure peace in the country following the announcement of the results of presidential elections, Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim said.

Egypt’s security forces have drawn up a plan on how to secure peace in the country following the announcement of the results of presidential elections, Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim said.

On Sunday, Egyptians are going to the polls in the second round of presidential elections, the first since Hosni Mubarak was forced to step down by an uprising in February last year.

“A detailed plan how to prevent potential clashes, violence during the counting of votes and following the announcement of the results has been elaborated,” the interior minister said.

Mohammed Mursi, head of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, is pitted against Ahmed Shafiq, Mubarak's last prime minister.

Minister Ibrahim called on all of the Egyptians to accept the elections.

The country's ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) is due to hand over to the new president on July 1.

But the run-up to the election has been marred in controversy after the Supreme Constitutional Court dissolved parliament on Thursday.

The Court ruled that the law governing last year's parliamentary elections was unconstitutional.

Mursi's Freedom and Justice Party controlled nearly half of the seats in the 508-member People's Assembly, which has been in session for just over four months.

The ruling was condemned as a "coup" by a number of scholars and politicians.

"This series of measures shows that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, the head of the counter-revolution, is adamant to bring back the old regime and the presidential elections are merely a show," six of Egypt's parties and movements said in a statement, according to the BBC.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Friday Washington expected the SCAF to fully transfer power to a democratically elected civilian administration as planned.

"There can be no going back on the democratic transition called for by the Egyptian people," Clinton told reporters in Washington.

 

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