Parliament’s motion to drop group of MPs membership explained

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Sat, 21 Jul 2018 - 08:57 GMT

BY

Sat, 21 Jul 2018 - 08:57 GMT

FILE - Egyptian Parliament

FILE - Egyptian Parliament

CAIRO – 21 July 2018: The Parliament is set to vote on revoking the membership of a group of MPs on accounts of trampling the Parliament’s code of ethics and the internal regulations.

According to the Parliament’s spokesperson, MP Salah Abdullah, the decision to strip the Parliamentarians of their memberships should be supported by a 75-percent vote from sitting members.

Speaker of the Parliament Ali Abdel Aal has previously referred some of the Parliament’s members to the Parliament’s ethic committee to probe the violations they committed while in office, including interrupting another MP while given the floor, attempting to disturb the Parliament’s sessions and violating the process of drafting important laws, misusing public funds and insulting the state’s officials and institutions.

He further added that the committee has completed its investigations and prepared a final report that was then submitted to him.

MP Elhamy Agina, known for his contentious statements and remarks, is amongst those endangered parliamentarians. Earlier in 2016, Agina called for having female students subjected to mandatory virginity tests to before admitting to universities.

Along with Agina, a host of members of the Parliamentarian opposition 25-30 coalition also are also included in the parliament’s motion tabled by Aal.

Also, a joint committee formed of different Parliamentarian committees including Defense and National Security, and Constitutional and Legislation Affairs committees are preparing to study a draft law introduced by dozens of Parliament members that suggests involving debtors in community service as an alternative penalty to imprisonment.

According to the draft law, the prison punishment a debtor faces would be replaced with community service, away from the prison, based on the judge’s perspective and opinion whether the defendant is legally defined as a debtor.

The work places, job description, working hours, grants and punishments would be determined by the prime minister or the concerned minister acting on his behalf, with respect to the debtor’s age.

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