"Overwhelmed". This is the word used by a colleague after the announcement on Saturday, mass death sentences handed down by an Egyptian judge against former President Mohamed Morsi, the top leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood and many Palestinians, including dead and a man imprisoned for nearly 20 years.
Dejection because it reminds gear 90s in Algeria and how in the chain of actions and reactions democratic process is dead and a country is torn. Dejection and fear to see that the experiences are useless.
Egypt is not Algeria, certainly. But it could be worse than our 90s we have great difficulty out politically and morally. The current context is indeed even more anxiety and more critical as our 90s.
The consequences of a situation where thousands of Muslim Brotherhood would fall over into violence, lack of political choice or recourse-and unfortunately they have demonstrated that justice is not a- would be calamitous.
The explanations of the Algerian crisis 90s -including one is not sorti- are varied, they espouse the ideological differences and political positions. However, representatives of all tendencies have returned and when they do not publicly proclaim it, they admit an aside: it was a terrible and gigantic mess.
The banishment of politics
Former Tunisian president always activist and human rights, Moncef Marzouki , our neighbor, is very familiar with this spiral where politics disappears completely and therefore the ability to trade and to recreate consensus. This banishment from the political corollary of an exclusionary choice leaves no room that report violent and destructive forces.
Marzouki has responded quickly to the astonishing verdict condemning a "political and unfair judgment." Beyond solidarity displayed towards Mohamed Morsi and sentenced to death, the former Tunisian president puts especially warned Egyptian officials in this serious abuse where justice ceases to be an appeal, an adjudicator for turn into war machine into an instrument to eliminate.
It is not certain that the Egyptian officials hear his "call to reason" in the political-media cynicism climate in Egypt and where the propaganda makers tend to self-poisoning.
But that does not detract from the validity of the call to Egyptian leaders to "not continue to make choices that can only bring calamity to Egypt that we love and we are anxious to stability."
Moncef Marzouki calls not commit the irreparable -l'exécution morts- of sentences and engage a "policy of national reconciliation to preserve social peace and true security."
Former Tunisian president took the opportunity to say in the direction of all the peoples, parties and "including Islamists" of the need to "banish the death penalty in our country."
L'Égypte a besoin d'entendre autre chose que "Viva La Muerte" | Saïd Djaafer