MMSA ဘေလာ့စည္းမ်ဥ္းမ်ား

* ဘာသာ သာသနာနွင့္လူမ်ိဳးတုိ႕၏ ဂုဏ္ကုိ ထိခုိက္ပ်က္စီးေစတတ္ေသာ အေရးအသားမ်ိဳးကုိ ေရွာင္ရွားရန္၊
* အခ်င္းခ်င္း ညီညြတ္မွဳ႕ကုိ ပ်က္စီးေစတတ္ေသာ အေၾကာင္းမ်ားကုိ ေရးသားျခင္းမွ ေရွာင္ရွားရန္၊
* သာသနာႏွင့္ မအပ္စပ္ေသာ အဖြဲ႕ဂုဏ္သိကၡာကုိ ျငိဳးႏြမ္းေစတတ္ေသာ ပုံမ်ားကုိတင္ျခင္းမွ ေရွာင္ရွားရန္၊
* ပုဂၢိဳလ္ေရးဆုိင္ရာမ်ားထက္ အမ်ားႏွင့္သက္ဆုိင္ေသာ အက်ိဳးမ်ားေစႏိုင္ေသာ ပုံမ်ား စာမ်ားကုိသာ ေရးသားရန္၊
* MMSAသည္ ပညာေရးအဖြဲ႕စည္း ျဖစ္သည့္ အတြက္ႏုိင္ငံေရးႏွင့္သက္ဆုိင္ေသာ အေရးအသားမ်ားကုိ ေရးျခင္းမွ ေရွာင္ရွားရန္၊
* ဗုဒၶဘာသာႏွင့္ မိမိတုိ႕ေလ့လာေနေသာ ပညာရပ္ဆုိင္ရာ အေၾကာင္းအရာမ်ားကုိ ဗဟုသုတအလုိ႕ငွါ ေရးသား မွ်ေ၀ၾကရန္၊

Published Date: 16 February 2011

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood has said it intends to form a political party once democracy is established, as the military yesterday set up a panel of experts to amend the country's constitution to allow democratic elections later this year.
The military is trying to push ahead quickly with a transition after Hosni Mubarak resigned last Friday in the wake of 18 days of unprecedented massive popular protests. The panel is to draw up changes at a breakneck pace - within ten days - to end t
he monopoly that the fallen president's ruling party once held.

Generals from the Armed Forces Supreme Council, which now rules Egypt, said that the military wants to hand power to a government and elected president within six months, the firmest timetable yet given.

However, the initial constitutional changes may not be enough for many in Egypt calling for the current constitution, now suspended, to be thrown out completely and rewritten to ensure no-one can again establish autocratic rule.

The military's choices for the panel's make-up were a sign of the new political legitimacy of the Muslim Brotherhood, the fundamentalist group that was the most bitter rival of Mubarak's regime. On the panel is Sobhi Saleh, a former MP from the Brotherhood who is seen as part of its reformist wing.

The eight-member committee held its opening meeting with the defence minister, Hussein Tantawi, yesterday. The panel also includes three judges from the Supreme Constitutional Court, one of them a Christian, and legal experts.

The panel is headed by Tareq el-Bishri, considered one of Egypt's top legal minds. A former judge, he was once a secular socialist but became a prominent thinker in the "moderate Islamic" political trend. He is respected on both sides as a bridge between the movements.

Recognising the anger over corruption fuelling strikes and protests across the country, the Supreme Council acknowledged how widespread the malfeasance was in the ousted regime.

"No-one expected that the corruption was of this size," the council said in a statement.

"The council does not have a magic wand to end it immediately. But at the same time, it will not allow new corruption or the growth of existing corruption."

The dozens of strikes, many hitting state agencies and industries, are a further blow to Egypt's economy, damaged by the three weeks of upheaval. They eased yesterday, mainly because an Islamic holiday meant state offices and businesses were closed.

The Muslim Brotherhood is eager to gain a legitimate role after decades of suppression under Hosni Mubarak, whose regime arrested thousands of its members in regular crackdowns.

http://news.scotsman.com/world/Democracy-at-the-double-as.6718848.jp

ပုိ႕စ္တင္သူ ။.............။ လျခမ္းျမီ on Tuesday 15 February 2011
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