L E Loveluck

Cairo-based freelance journalist

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Mohammed Morsi

Morsi’s tentative confrontation

July 12, 2012 by Louisa Loveluck

Egypt’s chaotic political circus is back on the road. On Sunday night, Mohammed Morsi called for the reinstatement of the country’s parliament, 3 weeks after its dissolution by the SCAF. For some, the move represents a bold challenge to the military’s authority. In a piece for New Statesman, however, I argue that the contents of Morsi’s decree itself are less radical than they first appear: Morsi’s decree rejects the SCAF’s most recent political manipulations, but at this stage continues to comply with […]

Categories: Egypt • Tags: Egypt, egyptian parliament, SCAF

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The SCAF’s decree: Coup d’état or crime d’état?

June 19, 2012 by Louisa Loveluck

A coup d’état is the sudden, illegal deposition of a government, usually by a small group of the existing state establishment—typically the military—to depose the extant government and replace it with another body, civil or military. A coup d’état is considered successful when the usurpers establish their dominance. As the polls closed on the final round of Egypt’s presidential election, an 11th hour decree by the ruling junta re-drew the rules of the political game. Prior to the vote, conventional wisdom […]

Categories: Egypt • Tags: Egypt, egyptian parliament, SCAF

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Update: Freedom of Information in Egypt

June 11, 2012 by Louisa Loveluck

In early May, members of the People’s Assembly Human Rights Committee, together with experts, presented a government draft bill on availing records and information during a discussion at the Information Center for Technology. The tension is apparent even in the language used in the bill’s title; it uses the word etaha in Arabic, meaning availing. Compare this with the draft law submitted by a group of civil society actors that includes the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights and the Association […]

Categories: corruption, Egypt • Tags: egyptian parliament, freedom of information law, middle-east, politics, Revolution

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