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Egypt delays voting on constitution

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Vice President Mahmoud Mekki also told the broadcaster that he had contacted leading democracy advocate Mohamed ElBaradei to join Morsi in a dialogue. ElBaradei leads the newly formed National Salvation Front, a group of liberals and youths who opposed Morsi’s decrees and led the protests in Cairo.

In a televised speech, ElBaradei made clear the opposition’s demands: cancellation of the declaration that Morsi used to give himself immunity from judicial oversight and postponement of the referendum.

“The people are angry because they feel their rights have been raped,” ElBaradei said on the ONTV network. “If he takes these decisions, he will be opening the door for dialogue. I hope he is listening.”

The opposition National Salvation Front rejected talks with Morsi, urging an ongoing sit-in at the palace and warned of assaults on the protesters and more violence.

“We reject the fake dialogue which Morsi has called for. No talks after bloodshed and before holding those responsible accountable,” the front said in a statement.

Some protesters expressed optimism after they heard that the early voting for Egyptians abroad, which was due to begin Saturday, had been put off until Dec. 5.

“This looks like the beginning of a retraction,” said Dr. Mohsen Ibrahim, a 56-year-old demonstrator. “This means Morsi may postpone the referendum. It looks like the pressure is working out.”

But he warned that “if Morsi doesn’t see the numbers of people protesting, then he will be repeating the same mistake of Mubarak.”

Since the Arab Spring uprising that toppled Mubarak, Egypt has been split between Islamists and mostly secular and liberal protesters. Each side depicts the conflict as an all-out fight for Egypt’s future and identity.

The opposition accuses Morsi and his Islamist allies of turning increasingly dictatorial to force their agenda on the country, monopolize power and turn Egypt to a religious state. The Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists say the opposition is trying to use the streets to overturn their victories in elections over the past year and stifle popular demands to implement Islamic Shariah law.

The tone was one of a battle cry as thousands of Islamists held funeral prayers at Al-Azhar Mosque – the country’s premier Islamic institution – for Morsi supporters killed in Wednesday’s clashes. A series of speakers portrayed the opposition as tools of the Mubarak regime, or as decadent and un-Islamic.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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