You're reading: Egypt gets first taste of a free vote in decades

CAIRO (AP) — Forty million Egyptians get their first taste of a free vote in decades when a package of constitutional amendments sponsored by Egypt's ruling military goes to a nationwide vote on Saturday.

The referendum is the first major test of the country’s transition to democracy after a popular uprising overthrew President Hosni Mubarak’s authoritarian rule.

The amendments drawn up by a panel of military-appointed legal scholars are intended to bring just enough change to the current constitution — which the military suspended after coming to power — to ensure that upcoming presidential and parliamentary elections are free and fair.

They would open the elections to independent and opposition candidates and restore full judicial supervision of votes, a measure seen as key to preventing fraud.

They would also limit presidents to two four-year terms, and curtail 30-year-old emergency laws that give police near-unlimited powers.

A "yes" vote would allow parliamentary and presidential elections to be held before the end of the year.

Critics are using social networks and full-page ads in newspapers to argue that the entire constitution must be scrapped and a new one drawn up to guarantee that Egypt is spared future dictators.

Egypt has been ruled by men of military backgrounds since 1952 and the current constitution outlines a system that puts overwhelming power in the hands of the president.

The critics also say elections this year will overwhelm the dozens of new political parties born out of the Jan.25-Feb.11 uprising and give unfair advantage to Mubarak’s National Democratic Party and the Muslim Brotherhood, the two largest and best organized political forces in the country.

Voters in Saturday’s referendum will be asked to cast ballots to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to the entire package of nine changes, something that critics describe as out of tune with the country’s new democratic climate.

Advocates of the amendments say that rejecting them will prolong the rule of the generals who took over from Mubarak when he stepped down Feb. 11 in the face of the 18-day popular uprising.

"We want the new constitution to be born in a democratic environment and drafted by people chosen by elected lawmakers," said Tarek al-Bishry, the head of the committee that drafted the changes.

Leading the "no" campaign are two likely presidential candidates — Nobel Peace laureate and former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency Mohamed ElBaradei and Amr Moussa, the current secretary general of the Arab League and former foreign minister.

ElBaradei told a conference in New Delhi Friday that Egyptians should vote against the constitutional amendments, saying that after decades of repression the newly formed political parties in Egypt should be given time to prepare for future parliamentary elections.

The Muslim Brotherhood is strongly campaigning for the adoption of the changes, a position that has set it apart from almost all other political groups in the country.

In a bid to bring out the vote, the military has decreed that voters would be allowed to cast their ballots at any polling center in the country with their national ID cards — issued to 18-year-olds and older — as the only required proof of identity.

The military is thought to be eager for a "yes" vote so it can meet its own six-month deadline for transferring power back to an elected government.