“Concerns”
The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s best organised political group, and others are particularly concerned about the key portfolios of defence, interior, justice and foreign affairs and want a clean break from Mubarak’s old guard.
The military, facing strikes over pay and working conditions as well as turmoil in its western neighbour Libya, treads a fine line between granting people their new freedoms and restoring normal life.
Having dissolved parliament and while preparing a referendum to amend the constitution to dismantle the apparatus that kept Mubarak in power, the military has effectively banned strikes and urged the nation to get back to work.
The military told the Arab world’s most populous nation on Thursday night to guard against “attempts to create strife”.
“The military council emphasises that it will take all steps to fulfil its promises, so that there is no return to the past and the sublime goal is to achieve the hopes and aspirations of this great nation,” the military said on its Facebook page.
Jubilant crowds started to gather for the protest early on Friday. Men, women and children, many carrying the Egyptian national flag, streamed towards Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the protests that toppled Mubarak.
The atmosphere was festive. Mothers pushed little children in strollers, with red, white and black Egyptian flags painted on toddlers’ cheeks.
Street vendors stood at rickety sidewalk tables, hawking t-shirts, buttons, flags and stickers saying “I love Egypt”, or “January 25, 2011” — the day Egypt’s revolution began.
Source: Agencies
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