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Egypt’s judges say they 
will boycott referendum

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The powerful military sees itself as the guarantor of Egypt’s interests and secular traditions.

Ahmed el-Zind, the chairman of the Judges’ Club, said Tuesday that 90 percent of the nation’s judges would not oversee the Saturday vote. The move is unlikely to stop the referendum from taking place, but it does cast further doubt on the legitimacy of the constitutional drafting process and, ultimately, the document itself.

President Mohammed Morsi’s deputy, Mahmoud Mekki, has said that if there are not enough judges to oversee the referendum, the vote can be staggered over several days. A faction of judges loyal to Morsi has said it would not boycott the vote.

In Cairo’s Nasr City district, a Muslim Brotherhood stronghold, tens of thousands of the president’s backers, some of them waving Egyptian flags, voiced their support Tuesday for the constitution in a massive rally in front of a local mosque.

“I want the chant of ‘Morsi’ to shake the earth,” a man on a stage set up for the occasion shouted into a microphone. “Alleyway to alleyway, house to house, the constitution means stability.”

The crowd grew rapidly as dozens of buses, most of them bearing license plate numbers from provinces outside of Cairo, offloaded thousands of Morsi supporters at the venue. Many of them men had beards, a hallmark of Islamists, while the women wore the Muslim veil or the niqab, covering everything except the eyes.

The crowd denounced the liberal opposition and its leaders, calling them undemocratic and accusing them of being loyalists of Hosni Mubarak, the authoritarian leader who was ousted in a popular uprising last year.

“Those protesting at the presidential palace are feloul (remnants of the Mubarak regime) and counter-revolutionaries,” said Mohammed Abdel-Aziz, a young Islamist protester. “They don’t want Islam.”

Another pro-Morsi protester, school teacher Mohammed el-Hamoul, said Islamists “accepted democracy so we could reach power.”

“Now those who claim to be democracy advocates lost faith in democracy when the Islamists rose to power,” he said.

Several hundred Islamists also have set up camp across town outside a media complex that is home to several independent TV networks critical of Morsi and the Brotherhood. The Islamists have threatened to storm the facility.

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

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