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Egypt's presidency appeals parliamentary elections suspension

Published March 13th, 2013 - 12:57 GMT
An unidentified Egyptian man shouts slogans against Egypt's President Mohamed Morsi and in support of an election boycott during a meeting of leaders from the Egyptian National Salvation Front (NSF) in Cairo in February. (Photo: AFP / Gianluigi Guercia)
An unidentified Egyptian man shouts slogans against Egypt's President Mohamed Morsi and in support of an election boycott during a meeting of leaders from the Egyptian National Salvation Front (NSF) in Cairo in February. (Photo: AFP / Gianluigi Guercia)
Egypt's government has appealed a ruling made by the Administrative Court suspending the elections for parliament's lower house that President Mohamed Morsi called for in February.
 
Egypt's Supreme Administrative Court (SAC) has scheduled a hearing for the appeal on 17 March. The hearing will combine the government's appeal, submitted through Egyptian State Lawsuit Authority, with another already submitted by ex-MP Mohamed El-Omda.
 
In addition to the elections' suspension, the ruling by the Administrative Court required the Shura Council – Egypt's upper house of parliament currently in charge of legislation – to refer the electoral law back to the High Constitutional Court (HCC), a step the Shura Council has ignored.

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