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To: crosslink

These must be the Hamas snipers’ apartment. They were arrested a couple of days ago on murder charges for killing 8 demonstrators in Mokattam where the MB “guidance” HQ is located.

No wonder armor was deployed on the Gaza border.


695 posted on 07/03/2013 3:54:16 PM PDT by melancholy (Professor S. Alinsky, Fleet Maintenance, White Hive Trolley Bosses)
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To: melancholy; maggief; onyx; hoosiermama

From the blaze better here I will post what I can.

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/07/03/heres-what-we-know-about-egypts-new-interim-president/

Mansour, chairman of the Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt only since July 1, has been named the new leader of Egypt.

(Credit: Twitter via HuffPo)

The 68-year-old judge was called to the position of acting President of Egypt by the military, according to Business Insider, following the takeover of the government and removal of previous President Mohammed Morsi.

Mansour will act as president until a new constitution is drawn up and new elections are held, according to CNN.

Here’s are five other things we’re hearing about Mansour:

1. Here’s his photo, via Al Arabiya Channel’s Twitter account:

(Credit: Twitter via Buzzfeed)

2. Mansour was appointed to the head of the constitutional court on June 11 by former President Morsi, according to the African Business Journal.

3. He’ll be sworn in on Thursday, July 4:

(Credit: Twitter via Muckrack.com)

4. There’s a grand effort afoot to update Mansour’s Wikipedia page, which was created only hours ago:

(Credit: Twitter via Muckrack.com)

(Credit: Twitter via Muckrack.com)

5. He’s a Cairo University Law School grad and began as a judge on the Supreme Constitutional Court in 1992, according to his updated Wikipedia page:

(Credit: Wikipedia)

More from The Independent:

Born in 1945, Mansour was appointed to the court in 1992, making him one of its longest-serving judges. The Muslim Brotherhood and the court repeatedly clashed during Mohamed Morsi’s clumsy attempts to force through constitutional change, with the Islamist party seeing it as an enemy and launching sometimes violent protests against its members.

Despite his control over Egypt’s political institutions Morsi was never able to control the judiciary, many of whom were Mubarak-era appointees. In December last year security guards had to step in after the car of Maher al-Beheiry, Mansour’s predecessor, was attacked by Brotherhood supporters fearful the court would dissolve the Islamist-dominated Constituent Assembly tasked with drafting the amended constitution.

This is a breaking news story.


697 posted on 07/03/2013 3:58:57 PM PDT by crosslink (Moderates should play in the middle of a busy street)
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