Egyptian newspapers,
covered with images of new president-elect Mohamed Morsi, are seen at a
newspaper kiosk in Cairo on JuneEgypt's president-elect Mohamed Morsi
has started forming what he pledges will be an inclusive government, one
day after becoming the country's first democratically elected civilian
president.
Following his election Sunday over former prime minister Ahmed Shafiq,
Morsi now is focusing on building his civilian administration -
including what he promises to be a diverse range of vice presidents.
The Islamist president-elect faces the difficult task of healing
national divisions and convincing all Egyptians, including religious
minorities and women, that their interests will be equally protected.
Already, he has resigned from the Muslim Brotherhood and its Freedom and
Justice Party, in a gesture to other parties with whom he hopes to form
a unity government.
But questions remain over just how much power Egypt's post-revolution
presidency holds. Despite promising to hand power to an elected
president by the end of this month, Egypt's ruling military council has
taken recent steps stripping the presidency of most of its authority.
The council has taken for itself key executive powers and claimed
control of legislative affairs after the Muslim Brotherhood-led lower
house of parliament was dissolved earlier this month.
The Brotherhood has rejected the military's actions, and Morsi's
supporters have vowed to stay in Cairo's Tahrir Square until the powers
are restored to the president and legislature, raising the prospect of a
power struggle between the Islamists and the generals.
Alongside pursuing national unity, Morsi has pledged to uphold Egypt's
standing international agreements. Chief among them is Egypt's peace
treaty with Israel from 1979. Egypt was the first Arab nation to enter
into a peace agreement with Israel, and the Muslim Brotherhood has long
been a critic of it.
Iranian state media reports on Monday quoted Morsi as saying hours
before his election that a closer relationship with Tehran would create a
"strategic balance" in the region. The two countries have not had
diplomatic relations since 1980, and Israeli officials might view such
an arrangement as a direct threat.
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