http://www.peoplesworld.org/egyptian-communists-morsi-ouster-reflects-popular-will/

On July 6, Nameh Mardom, the newspaper of the Tudeh (Iranian Communist
Party), published an interview with Salah Adli, the General Secretary
of the Egyptian Communist Party. The whole interview can be read on
the Solidnet.org website.

Question: How were the classes and strata mobilized in the second wave
of the June 30 revolution?

Adli: Since the outbreak of the revolution of 25th June 2011, the
protest movements have not subsided, and demonstrations of millions of
people have not stopped.... The workers' protests and strikes also
escalated. After.... Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood came to power,
the masses discovered their authoritarian nature, fascist character,
their bias to the interests of more reactionary and parasitic sections
of capitalism, and their inability to run a state the size of Egypt.
Furthermore, their betrayal of the interests of the homeland and their
willingness to play the role of the biggest broker to maintain the
interests of America and Israel in the region were exposed....

The "Tamarud" (Rebellion) movement succeeded in collecting more than
22 million signatures for the withdrawal of confidence in Morsi and in
support for calling for early presidential elections.....

Question: What is the level of the participation of the toiling
classes in these protests?

Salah Adli:

...the workers have been involved in most of the protests that have
escalated since 2006, and are participating in all the popular
demonstrations as part of the people and not as a class matter. This
is due to the absence of strong trade unions and federations, because
of the long legacy of tyranny and government repression.... the
practices and attitudes of the Muslim Brotherhood do not differ from
the orientations of the Mubarak regime; rather, they were worse. The
Muslim Brotherhood implemented the same policies on the continuation
of the privatization program and the liberalization of prices, and did
not raise the minimum wage even though it was one of the first demands
of the revolution.... the most dangerous position was their refusal to
pass the law to ensure freedom to form unions...

Question: What are the nature, tasks and urgent demands of the revolution?

Salah Adli

...[The first task] is promulgating a new civil democratic
constitution that stresses human rights, women's rights and economic
and social rights for the toiling classes....

One of the tasks of the democratic revolution is also the freedom to
form trade unions, political parties and associations without
governmental interference, rejecting the formation of political
parties on a religious and sectarian basis, full equality between men
and women in terms of rights and duties, equality before the law and
the criminalization of religious and other forms of discrimination.

...A top priority among [social demands] is specifying a minimum and
maximum wage and linking it to prices, cancelling debts for small
peasants, redistributing the budget items to increase spending on
education and health, providing housing for low income people, raising
taxes on the rich, regaining possession of the corporations that were
looted from the public sector, and fighting against corruption.

The national tasks are: opposing dependency on the United States,
refusing to succumb to Zionist hegemony, amending the Camp David
agreement, restoring Egypt's national role in the Arab, African,
regional and international levels, and deepening the relationship with
the peoples of the Third World.

Question: What is your view about the arguments which say that Morsi's
removal is undemocratic? Was he overthrown by the Egyptian army?

Salah Adli:

More than 22 million citizens of the Egyptian people ousted Morsi in
an unprecedented referendum [that was followed by the coming out of 27
million people to participate in the June 30 demonstrations]. It was
Morsi who overthrew legitimacy when he issued his dictatorial
constitutional declaration of November 2011 [and who unleashed
violence].

The defending of Morsi by the United States and western capitalist
states and portraying of the issue as "just a military coup"... hides
the fact that world imperialism is terrified by people's revolutions
and their ability to transcend the narrow confines of the democratic
bourgeoisie....

Question: What is your assessment of the USA's position toward the
developments in Egypt?

Salah Adli: The U.S... intervened immediately when [Mubarak] was
overthrown to form an alliance between the former Military Council and
the Muslim Brotherhood to pave the way to handing over power to the
Muslim Brotherhood after they pledged to ensure fulfilling the
interests of the United States, ensuring the security of Israel and
continuing the neoliberal economic policy which is against the
interests of the popular masses...We expect that the United States, in
the current critical period, will encourage plots to ignite sedition
and strife....to turn Egypt into another Iraq. [this has been thwarted
so far].

Question: What are the main challenges facing your party?

Salah Adli: The main challenge is to unite the forces of the left in
the first place to confront the big tasks that we are facing at this
stage.

1.     To ensure the achievement of the objectives and tasks of the
transitional phase.

2.     To achieve consensus on a single candidate for the national and
democratic forces to fight the battle of presidential elections.

3.     To form a front of leftist forces, Nasserites, youth movements
and trade union organizations; to prepare joint lists to fight the
forthcoming parliamentary and local elections; and to exert pressure
to make sure that there is no retreat from correcting the path of the
revolution....

4.     To seek to complete and develop the party structure, to renew
the party with fresh blood, and to develop its program so that we can
face the big challenges that we are confronting.

Edited by Emil Schepers.

Photo: Egyptians women bang metal cooking pots and chant
anti-president Mohammed Morsi slogans while protesting in front of the
provincial government headquarters during day six of the general
strike in Port Said, Egypt, Feb. 22. Factory workers, activists and
laborers have held street rallies that brought the coastal city on the
northern tip of the Suez Canal to a halt. Nasser Nasser/AP
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