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A constitutional referendum was held in Egypt on 19 March 2011, [2] following the 2011 Egyptian revolution.More than 14 million (77%) were in favour, while around 4 million (23%) opposed the changes; 41% of 45 million eligible voters turned out to vote.
After gathering in Tahrir Square, the protest moved to the MOI, then to the Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt, and finally towards the Israeli embassy. The 2011 Israeli embassy attack occurred later in Cairo, when Egyptian protesters entered the Israeli embassy after tearing down the wall surrounding the building that housed it. [127]
The devil is now in the details for Egypt's democracy, Rabab Fayad, The Daily Star, 14 March 2011; Understanding Egypt's revolution, Tarik al-Bishri, Al Jazeera English, 18 March 2011, "The chair of the committee tasked with rewriting the Egyptian constitution reflects on the birth of a new regime."
2011 Egyptian constitutional referendum; Domestic responses to the Egyptian revolution of 2011; Timeline of the Egyptian Crisis under the SCAF; Timeline of the Egyptian revolution of 2011; 2012 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2012 Egyptian presidential election; 2012 Egyptian Shura Council election; 2013–2015 detention of Al Jazeera ...
The Egyptian Crisis (Arabic: الأزمة المصرية, romanized: al-ʿazma al-Maṣriyya) was a period that started with the Egyptian revolution of 2011 and ended with the beginning of the presidency of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in 2014. It was a tumultuous three years of political and social unrest, characterized by mass protests, a series of ...
1956 Egyptian referendum; 1971 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 1979 Egyptian referendum; 1980 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2007 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2011 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2012 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2014 Egyptian constitutional referendum
2011 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2011–12 Egyptian parliamentary election; 2012 Egyptian Shura Council election; 2012 Egyptian presidential election; 2012 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2014 Egyptian constitutional referendum; 2014 Egyptian presidential election; 2015 Egyptian parliamentary election
On 9 July, Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi's order to reconvene parliament was rejected by Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court which said after meeting on 9 July 2012 that all its rulings and decisions, including its judgement that part of the election for parliament was unconstitutional and which led in return to the assembly's dissolution ...