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John R Bradley

ByJohn R Bradley, John R Bradley

Analysis

Morsi’s hidden purge of the judges

May 2, 2013 14:30
A protest in support of judicial independence and against the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo last week (Photo: AP)
2 min read

The decision this week of Egypt’s Islamist President, Mohammed Morsi, to convene a “conference” in response to outrage among the country’s judges at a proposed reduction of their compulsory retirement age, from 70 to 60, is being presented as a victory for the latter group of greedy geriatrics and a humiliating climbdown on the part of the former.

But the opposite is true. Not since Ibn Saud, the founder of Saudi Arabia, has the Middle East seen such a sly political fox as Mr Morsi. What he actually did was lure the judges into his presidential den to give them enough rope with which they will eventually hang themselves.

For starters, the judges were shouting slogans on the streets not because of anything Mr Morsi had said, but as a result of comments made to a Kuwaiti newspaper by Mehdi Akef, the Muslim Brotherhood’s Supreme Guide. He claimed that 3,500 judge would “soon” be dismissed by parliament. Parallels were drawn with dictator Gamal Abdul Nasser’s dismissal of 189 Egyptian judges in 1969, known as the “massacre of the judiciary”.

However, Mr Akef quickly, if unconvincingly, denied having said anything of the sort; and a mass, Islamist-led, anti-judiciary march, planned for last Friday, was abruptly cancelled. Nevertheless, the commotion allowed Mr Morsi to step in to play the role, once again, of unifying statesman.