A leading democracy advocate Mohammed ElBaradei has been named vice president of Egypt. |
A look at some of the top figures emerging in Egypt after the military removed President Mohammed Mursi:
—Adly Mansour, 67, a judge:
Mansour emerged from near-obscurity when he became head of the
Supreme Constitutional Court, two days before Egypt's military chief
announced last Wednesday that Mursi had been deposed and was to be
replaced by the chief justice. He was sworn in as Egypt's interim
president on Thursday.
—Hazem el-Beblawi, 76, a prominent economist:
Egypt's military-backed interim president named el-Beblawi as prime
minister on Tuesday. He previously served as finance minister and held
the title of deputy prime minister in one of the first cabinets formed
after the 2011 uprising forced Hosni Mubarak from power and the military
stepped in to rule. He resigned in protest three months later after 26
demonstrators, mostly Christians, were killed by troops and security
forces in a crackdown on their march.
—Mohammed ElBaradei, 71, former director of the UN nuclear watchdog agency:
Originally pegged to be interim prime minister, the Nobel Peace Prize
laureate was opposed by religious conservatives. Mansour named
ElBaradei as vice president on Tuesday.
With a long career on the international scene, ElBaradei served as an
Egyptian diplomat to the United Nations and later as an aide to Egypt's
foreign minister. He was the director general of the International
Atomic Energy Agency for nearly 12 years. He and the IAEA shared the
Nobel Peace Prize in 2005.
After popular protests toppled Mubarak in February 2011, ElBaradei
emerged as a democracy advocate and later as an opposition leader in the
National Salvation Front. After a series of widely criticized moves by
Mursi, ElBaradei said members of the dominant Muslim Brotherhood lived
"in a delusion" for thinking they could manage the country on their own.
—Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, 58:
El-Sissi stepped onto the center stage of Egyptian politics when the
military on July 1 gave Mursi a 48-hour ultimatum to resolve his
differences with the opposition after millions took to the streets on
June 30 to demand the Islamist leader leave power. On Wednesday,
el-Sissi announced Mursi's removal.
A graduate of the Egyptian military academy and the US Army War
College, el-Sissi was appointed commander in chief of the Egyptian armed
forces in August 2012, replacing Field Marshall Mohammed Hussein
Tantawi, who was ordered into retirement by Mursi.
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