Declaration of the Republic
Appearance
The Declaration of the Republic was a constitutional declaration[1] issued by the Revolutionary Command Council of Egypt on June 18, 1953.[2] The purpose of this document was to begin Egypt's transition to a republic and to appoint Major General Muhammad Naguib as the republic's President.
Timeline
[edit]- The Egyptian Revolution of 1952 demanded that King Farouk abdicate to his son and heir apparent, Prince Ahmed Fouad, and leave the country before 18:30 on July 26, 1952.
- On December 10, 1952, the dissolution of the Constitution of 1923 was announced by the Revolutionary Command Council.
- On January 15, 1953, the Revolutionary Command Council abolished political parties and specified a transitional period of three years.
- On February 10, 1953, the Council issued a constitutional declaration publicizing the provisions for an interim constitution.
Contents
[edit]The document claims that the opulent lifestyle of the Muhammad Ali family, specifically Ismai'il Pasha, drove Egypt into debt, which gave foreign militaries a plea to occupy the country.
The document includes three demands:
- The abolition of the Muhammad Ali monarchy
- The declaration of a republic led by Mohamed Naguib
- The persistence of the Command Council throughout the 'transitional period'
The document ends with a religious note: "We have to trust God and ourselves, and to feel the pride that God has endowed to his faithful worshippers."[1]
Signatories
[edit]- Major General Staff Muhammad Naguib, Leader of the Army Revolution
- Binbashi Staff Gamal Abdul Nasser Hussein
- Wing Commander Gamal Salem
- Wing Commander Abdel Latif Mahmoud Boghdadi
- Binbashi Staff Zakaria Mohieddin
- Binbashi Anwar El-Sadat
- Binbashi Hussein El-Shafei
- Sagh Staff Abdel Hakim Amer
- Sagh Staff Salah el-Din Mustafa Salem
- Sagh Staff Kamal El-Din Hussein
- Squadrons Leader Hassan Ibrahim
- Sagh Khaled Mohieddin
References
[edit]- ^ a b "ET acquires hand-written constitutional declaration of Free Officers". EgyptToday. 2019-07-23. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
- ^ "Egypt under Nasser F. R. C. Bagley". JSTOR. JSTOR 40198229. Retrieved 20 August 2021.