Egyptian judges call for strike

Ahmed al-Zind (C), head of Egypt's Judges Club, during a meeting in Cairo on 24 November.Mursi is under pressure from his supporters as many judges are from the Mubarak era

Egypt’s judges have called for a nationwide strike in protest against a decree by President Mohammed Mursi granting himself extensive new powers.

After an emergency meeting, the judges union urged Mr Mursi to retract the decree they see as an “unprecedented attack” on the judiciary. Mr Mursi says he wants to protect the revolution.

According to his decree, no authority can revoke presidential decisions.

It includes a bar on dissolving the assembly drawing up a new constitution.

Work on the constitution has been plagued by legal complaints questioning the make-up of the assembly.

Police fired tear gas to disperse crowds outside the court where the judges met, while pro-Mursi demonstrators tried to disrupt the judges’ meeting.

Opposition politician Mohamed ElBaradei said there could be no dialogue with Mr Mursi as long as the decree was in force.

Speaking to reporters, he said he was waiting to see strong condemnation of the move by the international community.

Thursday’s decree sparked angry demonstrations, and attacks on offices of Mr Mursi’s Islamist FJP party.

‘Unprecedented attack’

The Judges Club – the union which represents judges throughout the country – called for “the suspension of work in all courts and prosecution administrations” after emergency talks.

It said that Abdel Maguid Mahmoud, prosecutor general since the Mubarak era who was sacked as part of the decree, should be reinstated.

In a statement earlier, the Supreme Judicial Council – Egypt’s highest judicial authority – called Mr Mursi’s move “an unprecedented attack on the independence of the judiciary and its rulings”.

Judges and prosecutors in Egypt’s second city Alexandria have already begun a strike, saying they will not return to work until the decree is reversed.

Tear gas fired at anti-Mursi protesters during clashes in front of the Supreme Judicial Council in Cairo on 24 November.Protesters say Mr Mursi has more power than Hosni Mubarak

However, another group known as Judges for the Sake of Egypt has backed the decree, according to state TV.

The response of the judges has been tough, if fairly predictable, says the BBC’s Jon Leyne in Cairo.

One judge told the BBC their concerns were for Egypt, not their jobs.

“We can’t work like this, we have to change it and we will change it,” Ahmed Shannan said.

Fresh protests

There had been reports that the Supreme Judicial Council was about to disband the constituent assembly for a second time, our correspondent adds, a move that could seriously derail the transition to democracy and further delay new parliamentary elections.

This, in turn, could deter Egypt’s political leaders from taking tough decisions while they wait for the vote.

Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi in Cairo (23 Nov 2012)President Mursi says he is making decisions for the good of all Egyptians

Meanwhile, Egyptian human rights agencies filed a lawsuit at the Court of Administrative Justice calling for the decree to be annulled, Mena news agency reported.

The ruling that triggered the protests bans any challenging of the president’s decisions and laws.

Both critics and supporters of Mr Mursi have staged rallies since the decree.

Both sides have planned rival demonstrations for Tuesday.

The US said earlier that Mr Mursi’s move had worried in the international community.

And speaking on Saturday, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle expressed “great concern” about the recent developments.

“It is very important that the ideals of the revolution are not lost in these times of change, and that President Mursi continues the constitutional process towards democracy, the rule of law and the separation of powers,” he said.