Saturday, July 28, 2012

Morsi names outgoing minister as Egypt PM

Egypt's Islamist President Mohamed Morsi named outgoing irrigation minister Hisham Qandil, a reputed independent, as prime minister on Tuesday and tasked him with forming a new government. The appointment comes 25 days after Morsi was sworn in as Egypt's first civilian and freely elected head of state to replace president Hosni Mubarak, who was driven from office in a popular uprising in February 2011.

Qandil was irrigation minister in the outgoing government of Kamal Ganzuri, whom he replaces.

"This appointment of a patriotic and independent figure comes after much study and discussion to choose a person able to manage the current scenario," said Morsi spokesman Yassir Ali.

"Dr Qandil had no affiliation to any political party before or after the revolution," said Ali.

After talks with Morsi at the presidency, Qandil thanked the president and called on all forces to help achieve the goals of the revolution.

"I want to thank the president of the republic for the trust he has placed in me for this important, heavy and difficult task, and I ask God to help us," Qandil said.

He urged "all political forces and the people of Egypt to support us in this difficult mission ... We must exert all efforts to achieve the goals of the revolution."

Qandil stressed that his government would be made up of technocrats and that appointments will "not be based on (political) orientations."

"Competence will be the basis for choosing the ministers," he said.

The incoming premier also said Morsi was in regular talks with the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which oversaw the transition from Mubarak's rule, over whether SCAF chief Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi would remain in his current post as defence minister.

Little known outside political circles, Qandil describes himself as a religious man, telling reporters after his appointment as water minister that he had grown a beard "in line with the Sunna," the words and practices of the Muslim Prophet Mohammed.

Morsi has repeatedly vowed that his team and government would be inclusive and that he would be a "president for all Egyptians."

He said he would appoint a woman and a Christian as his deputies.

Born in 1962, Qandil graduated from Cairo University's faculty of engineering before doing post-graduate studies in the United States.

In 1993, he received a doctorate from the University of North Carolina.

A father of five, he held various public sector posts in water and engineering, as well as in finance. He was a senior manager at the African Development Bank before heading Egypt's Nile Water Sector.

Since Morsi was elected in June, Egypt has been embroiled in a complex power struggle between the former senior Muslim Brotherhood official and the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF).

Just days before Morsi was elected, the SCAF disbanded parliament in response to a constitutional court ruling that it had been invalidly elected.

The origins of the battle for parliament lay in the constitutional declaration issued by the SCAF before the president was sworn in.

The declaration, which acts as a temporary constitution, granted the military sweeping powers, including legislative control, and rendered the presidential post little more than symbolic.
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