Egyptian riot police stand outside parliament as protesters gather in Cairo on Tuesday.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: An electoral committee member says the results will be delayed "a day or two"
- If Shafik is "proclaimed a winner ... it's sheer forgery," a Muslim Brotherhood official says
- Two presidential contenders proclaim themselves winners in weekend election
- Military rulers plan to announce the results of the presidential runoff Thursday
"The committee has not
completed the verification of a total of 400 electoral violation reports
submitted by the two presidential candidates," said Tarek Shibl, a
senior member of electoral committee. "Most probably the announcement of
the election results will be delayed a day or two but nothing is final
yet."
Earlier Wednesday, the
former ruler, ousted Egyptian strongman Hosni Mubarak, was removed from
life-support equipment, his health improved a day after a state-run news
agency reported that he was "clinically dead," his attorney said.
"The hospital will issue a
statement shortly about his official medical status to curb the rumors
and confusion from last night about his death reported by irresponsible
media that has driven the country into a state of madness," Farid El
Deeb, Mubarak's attorney, said Wednesday.
The official Middle East
News Agency reported late Tuesday that Mubarak was clinically dead; the
nation's military rulers denied it.
"He is not clinically
dead as reported, but his health is deteriorating and he is in critical
condition," said Gen. Mamdouh Shahin, a member of the Supreme Council of
the Armed Forces.
Nile TV issued a similar report Wednesday.
Mubarak, 84, was reported to have been taken Tuesday to a military hospital in Cairo after suffering a stroke in prison.
But reports of Mubarak's failing health have taken a back seat to the political and constitutional turmoil in the country.
The results of last weekend's runoff between Ahmed Shafik, the last prime minister to serve under Mubarak, and Mohamed Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate, remain uncertain.
"It's all in the hands" of election officials and not the military council," said SCAF spokesman Lt. Col. Mohamed Askar.
Shafik and Mosri each
proclaimed himself winner in the race to succeed Mubarak 16 months after
a popular uprising ended his three-decade rule.
Thousands of Egyptians
gathered Tuesday night in Cairo's Tahrir Square -- the birthplace of the
anti-Mubarak ferment -- to show their support for their preferred
candidate. Each side in the election has accused the other of voting
irregularities and called for an investigation.
Both presidential candidates claim victory in Egypt
Judges for Egypt, an independent group citing unofficial projections, told reporters Wednesday that Morsi had won.
Mahmoud Ghozlan, a Muslim Brotherhood spokesman, said that if Shafik is "proclaimed a winner tomorrow, then it's sheer forgery."
Observers have been
questioning how much authority the president -- whoever he turns out to
be -- will have given that SCAF last week stripped the position of much
of its power.
"I'm uncertain where we
are going," Salma Othman, a 32-year-old Cairo real estate agent, told
CNN. "Why are we electing a president if SCAF is issuing a
constitutional decree limiting the powers of the president?"
"Nothing's changed, everyone's negative," said Massa el Gamal, an 18-year-old Cairo student.
"I would hope that the
new president would bring the people together, but what's happening now
is that they are driving people against each other. Don't they know that
they will be president of all Egyptians? By the way, I didn't vote
because I'm not convinced with either candidate," she said.
Hani Abou Gabal, a
42-year-old public relations manager, said the military rulers were
doing all they could to "not give up the country to the Muslim
Brotherhood."
What is the Muslim Brotherhood?
"I hope it will be the
liberal who wins -- I mean Shafik -- and I think there will be some
blood before it calms down," he said. "Egypt will stabilize -- only by
force. Force is the only way to deal with Egyptian mentality."
Shafik is also the
favorite for Magda Abdel-Fattah, a 57-year-old human resources manager,
because she doesn't want her "civilization" and "culture erased."
"In all cases, it will
be chaotic," she said. "In my view, the mob are the ones in the street
today (protesting). The cultured revolutionaries are home are in their
homes."
Military rulers dissolved the lower house of parliament last week, extending their power and sparking accusations of a coup.
The military council
announced it had full legislative authority. The Muslim Brotherhood, the
country's largest Islamist group, was the dominant party in the
parliament.
Under an interim
constitutional declaration released Monday, the military council retains
the power to make laws and budget decisions until a new constitution is
written and a new parliament elected. The declaration says Supreme
Council members "shall decide all matters related to military affairs,
including the appointment of its leaders." The president has the power
to declare war, it says, but only "after the approval" of the Supreme
Council.
Former U.S. President
Jimmy Carter, whose Carter Center observed the elections, which issued
preliminary findings about the runoff -- said Tuesday that he was
"deeply troubled by the undemocratic turn" in Egypt's transition.
"The dissolution of the
democratically elected parliament and the return of elements of martial
law generated uncertainty about the constitutional process before the
election," he said in a written statement. "The Supreme Council of the
Armed Forces' new Constitutional Declaration, in which they carve out
special privileges for the military and inject themselves into the
constitution drafting process, violates their prior commitment to the
Egyptian people to make a full transfer of power to an elected civilian
government."
More than 800 people died and 6,000 were wounded during the uprising that ended Mubarak's 29-year rule in February 2011.
The ex-president and his
former interior minister, Habib al-Adly, were convicted of ordering
security forces to kill anti-government protesters and this month were
given life terms.
But other top aides -- as well as Mubarak's two sons, who had been tried on corruption charges -- were acquitted.
Mubarak became president
after the in October 1981 assassination of his predecessor, Anwar
Sadat. Mubarak ruled Egypt with an iron hand and as a staunch ally of
the United States, which gives the nation $1.3 billion a year in
military aid.
Prior to his sentencing, Mubarak was already suffering from health problems; he attended court on a gurney.
Citizens were cynical or fatalistic about the Mubarak health scare Tuesday.
Othman, the Cairo real
estate agent, referred to the health scare as a "dishonest staged play."
She said she thinks rumors have been spread "to divert attention from
election results." El Gamal, the Cairo student, said she believes the
latest accounts about Mubarak's health were staged to evoke "sympathy
from the street."
Whatever happens to
Mubarak in the short term, he is "finished," Abdel-Fattah said. "Mubarak
died a year and half ago as far as I'm concerned," the human resources
manager said.
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