Egypt court suspends military arrest powers
The court took the decision after reviewing an appeal filed by 17 rights groups against the controversial decree passed on June 13.
"The decision creates extraordinary powers that have no basis in law," the groups had said in a statement, describing the order as "a blatant circumvention of the official end of the state of emergency."
"The decision could put in place far worse restrictions than those of the state of emergency," the statement said.
The military has said the decree was necessary after the end of a decades-long state of emergency while the army remained on the streets.
The decision infuriated activists and protesters, who have campaigned for years for an end to the state of emergency, which granted police wide powers of arrest and was often used to curb dissent.
Ousted president Hosni Mubarak had called in the army during an uprising last year in which protesters torched police stations. The military is scheduled to hand power to president-elect Mohamed Morsi on June 30.
The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights watchdog welcomed the court decision, saying the decree had allowed the military the right to arrest people for "resisting the rulers and insulting them."
"The groups that filed the appeal believed that many of the crimes mentioned in the decree are included in the right of Egyptians to peacefully express political views opposing the regime," it said in a statement.
The head of military justice Adel al-Mursi had said earlier this month that the decree was necessary after the state of emergency expired on May 31.
"The decision fills a legal vacuum, as the army is still on the streets even after the state of emergency was lifted," Adel al-Mursi, the head of military justice, told reporters.
The measure came just days before a presidential election runoff between ex-premier Ahmed Shafiq and Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate who was announced the winner on Sunday.
Morsi has since been conducting talks with the military rulers about their powers after they transfer control to him on June 30.
In other decrees this month, the military assumed legislative powers after dissolving parliament following a court order and formed a national security council dominated by generals which will have a large say in policy-making.
It also reserves the right to pick a new constituent assembly to draft the country’s next constitution.
The current assembly, elected by parliament, may also be dissolved by a court decision expected on September 1.
NEWS FEED
UFC: Abus Magomedov defeats Mikhal Oleksiychuk
UFC: Farman Hasanov defeats his opponent from the United States
Wheat to be shipped to Armenia via transit through Azerbaijan
Jeyhun Bayramov and Hakan Fidan hold phone conversation
"Caucasus Eagle 2026" exercise concludes-VIDEO
Tremors jolt Delhi-NCR, Kashmir as magnitude 6.2 earthquake hits Afghanistan
Tanker hit by unidentified projectile in Hormuz, British maritime agency says
Russian Defense Ministry claims two Ukrainian MiG-29 fighter jets destroyed at Mykolaiv airfield
Iran accuses U.S. of violating two clauses of memorandum
Service chief: Lowering military conscription age limit has reduced state expenses
Ukrainian MiG-29 crashes during combat mission, Air Force says, pilot ejects safely
Russia and Ukraine exchange civilian detainees
Baku–Nakhchivan flights cancelled due to thunderstorms
One killed, 11 injured in Ukraine's attack on Volgograd
Bahrain says Iranian drones targeted its territory early Saturday
Zelenskyy confirms strike on military plant in Volgograd-VIDEO-UPDATED
Kremlin: Putin and Lukashenko continue talks
Small aircraft crash in Beijing kills one person, injures 13, local govt says
Iran's Foreign Ministry reacts to U.S. airstrikes
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva visit "CandyFest" summer festival and watch "Magic Pearl" water circus show-PHOTO
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva participate in seasonal flower planting campaign on Baku Boulevard-PHOTO
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva attend opening and presentation ceremonies at the Seaside National Park-PHOTO
Baltic states urge EU to speed up ban on Russian oil imports
Seoul says Chinese, Russian military aircraft enter its air defense zone
Gold and silver rise in commodity markets
Natural gas falls on New York exchange
Azerbaijani oil trades at $74
Two police officers killed in armed attack on police checkpoint in Iran
Brent oil falls by more than 4%
Major global stock market indices
State Department: Lebanon agreement envisages withdrawal of Israeli forces
Saudi Arabia resumes oil loading in the Persian Gulf
Vance: US ready to discuss memorandum disagreements with Iran
IRGC says it struck US military positions in response to US airstrike on Iran
France wins Group I after beating Norway 4-1
US strikes Iranian targets in response to attack on cargo ship
Netanyahu says Israeli army will remain in southern Lebanon ‘security zone’ until Hezbollah disarmed
UK guarantees $1 billion World Bank loan to Ukraine
Israel, Lebanon sign framework peace deal after US-mediated talks
Venezuela quake death toll rises to 92
Trump accuses Iran of violating ceasefire with US
Scuffle breaks out during Georgian parliament session, proceedings suspended - PHOTO
Turkish ships stranded in Strait of Hormuz safely leave the region
Turkish actor Kadir İnanır dies at 77
Putin meets with Belarusian President Lukashenko
Putin bans deportation of foreigners serving under contract in Russian army
Seven Hezbollah fighters killed in Lebanon
Explosion followed by fire hits factory in Türkiye
Death toll hits 55 in France as drownings rise amid Europe heatwave
Baghaei: Joint statement by US and GCC is a distortion of truth