Egypt's military leadership council on Monday gave Field Marshal Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi -- the army chief who helped oust the country's first democratically elected president -- its blessing to run for the presidency, the state-run Middle East News Agency reported.
El-Sisi has yet to
announce whether he'll run, but the move by Egypt's Supreme Council of
the Armed Forces essentially is an endorsement of him, said Ehab Badawy,
a spokesman for Egyptian Interim President Adly Mansour.
The council added in a
statement to state television Monday night that it would be up to
El-Sisi to decide, but that it considers his candidacy "a mandate and an
obligation."
Badawy said that El-Sisi,
who was promoted from general to field marshal earlier Monday, would
have to retire from the military before running for president. The
interim government has not given a date for elections; candidates can
officially declare themselves on February 18.
El-Sisi, who was defense
minister when the military ousted President Mohamed Morsy in July, had
said he would run for president if the Egyptian people wanted him to,
state media reported recently.
Egypt to have presidential elections first
The Arab world's most
populous nation has seen months of political turmoil since the military
deposed Morsy, of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement, on July 3
after mass protests against his rule. Demonstrators accused him of
pursuing an Islamist agenda and excluding other factions from the
government.
An interim,
military-backed government was installed in Morsy's place, but Morsy's
supporters have held near-daily protests since his ouster, demanding
that he be reinstated. The protests often have devolved into violence.
This month, Egyptians
overwhelmingly approved a new constitution, with 98.1% in favor, the
Electoral Commission said. But supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood,
which the interim government banned late last year, boycotted the
referendum in response to the crackdown against it.
Morsy was elected in
2012, a year after a popular uprising ousted longtime ruler Hosni
Mubarak. Morsy's supporters say that he wasn't given a fair chance and
that the military has returned to the authoritarian practices of
Mubarak.
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