GENERAL SAYS EGYPT SHOULD KEEP TO TRANSITION PLAN

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By SARAH EL DEEB
A supporter of Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi hangs a poster with Arabic that reads, “Sissi you are a gift from God, your people are here for you,” during campaign to collect signatures and nominate el-Sissi to run for Egypt’s president at Pyramisa hotel in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Sept. 30, 2013. A group of professionals, lawyers, and ex-army officers have launched a campaign to collect signatures urging el-Sissi to run for presidency just two months after he ousted former Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s military chief called on the country Tuesday to adhere to the timetable of a political road map that envisions presidential elections by next spring, saying this would allow Egyptians to focus on challenges to national security.

Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi was speaking during a ceremony to honor troops ahead of the national commemoration of Egypt’s Oct. 6 crossing of the Suez Canal during the 1973 war with Israel.

The 40th anniversary is on Sunday, when the military plans air shows and other celebrations. Supporters of Mohammed Morsi, the Islamist president whom el-Sissi ousted, are for their part planning protest rallies. The July 3 coup against Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president, followed mass demonstrations calling on him to resign.

The planned protests and fears of renewed violence highlight the turmoil that continues to engulf Egypt and which may threaten to derail the military-backed road map announced after the coup that ends with presidential elections by early next year.

El-Sissi has spoken infrequently since Morsi’s ouster, despite massive popularity that positioned him as the country’s most prominent leader and raised fears that it may be the beginning of a personality cult. Many have called on el-Sissi to run for president, a prospect his spokesman has denied.

El-Sissi told the audience, which included families of troops killed during the 1973 war and in recent violence, that the armed forces will not support any candidate for the presidency.

“The armed forces will not support any single” candidate, el-Sissi said in comments aired on state TV and carried by other private stations. “Everyone has to face the people who will decide … not the army.”

“You people will choose your rulers, and true, you are the ones who get rid of them too,” said el-Sissi, a reference to the huge demonstrations that helped push Morsi, as well as his predecessor Hosni Mubarak, from office.

El-Sissi called for “a quick conclusion to the transitional period according to the measures agreed upon in the road-map,” according to the official Middle East News Agency. “There must be an accord to quickly return to work, stability and confronting the challenges to Egypt’s national security.”

An appointed committee is nearly finished with the task of amending the constitution, the first step in the post-July 3 road map. Officials in the committee say a first draft of the charter is expected by mid-October. Parliamentary and presidential elections are to follow the adoption of the amended charter in a referendum, expected by late February or early March, capping the road map announced by el-Sissi.

Pro-Morsi protests have weakened, but continued on a near-daily basis, since his fall. Meanwhile, authorities have battled with a surge in militant activities in northern Sinai and in other parts of Egypt. They accuse Morsi supporters of fueling the violence to unsettle the interim authorities. The pro-Morsi camp has denied the charges.

In his speech, el-Sissi saluted troops and the police force for their role in fighting the violence.

In a rare gesture, el-Sissi also apologized to the residents of Sinai, whom he said may have suffered some losses or damage during the ongoing military operation against militants in the area bordering the Gaza Strip and Israel. El-Sissi vowed to compensate the residents for the losses they incurred.

Some residents of Sinai have complained of what they said were arbitrary raids that impacted civilians.

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